The Sandwich Swap
The Sandwich Swap book cover

The Sandwich Swap

Hardcover – Picture Book, April 20, 2010

Price
$14.99
Format
Hardcover
Pages
32
Publisher
Little, Brown Books for Young Readers
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-1423124849
Dimensions
8.85 x 0.7 x 11.35 inches
Weight
14.5 ounces

Description

From School Library Journal Kindergarten-Grade 2—The day Lily stops eating her peanut butter and jelly sandwich to tell Salma her hummus and pita sandwich looks yucky—and vice versa—is the day they stop being friends. Their collaborative art projects end. They no longer play on the swings or jump rope together, and, at lunch time, they sit at different tables. As their story spreads across the school, so does intolerance. Students begin choosing sides in the cafeteria and calling each other "Jelly heads" and "Chickpea brains." When the two girls get caught in the middle of a food fight and called to the principal's office, they decide it's time to make some changes. The first is accomplished over their sandwich lunch; the second, over a multicultural smorgasbord, the latter depicted on a foldout of an enormous table laden with dishes and flags. Soft watercolor cartoon illustrations portray a lively student body and a slightly forbidding principal. This engaging title reminds children that having the courage to try new things can result in positive experiences.— Tanya Boudreau, Cold Lake Public Library, AB, Canada (c) Copyright 2010. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted. From Booklist The Queen of Jordan is the co-author of this lively picture book based on her nursery-school experiences that taught her to be “open to what seems foreign or strange.” Salma and Lily are best friends at school, and lively, double-page spreads show the girls having fun, drawing pictures, playing in the schoolyard, and eating lunch together, until one day Lily blurts out that Salma’s sandwich (pita bread and hummus) looks kind of yucky, and Salma says the same about her friend’s peanut butter and jelly (“looks gross, and it smells bad, too”). The harmonious pictures change to show angry standoffs, and other kids choose sides, shout insults, and begin a huge food fight. Finally, after a visit to the principal’s office, Salma and Lily feel ashamed. They taste each other’s sandwiches (yummy!), hug, and trade lunch. The story is preachy, and food makes a too-easy peacemaker. But preschoolers will recognize the school drama of friends and enemies and the messy confrontations that are resolved. Preschool-Grade 2. --Hazel Rochman In her author's note, Jordanian royal Al Abdullah explains that an incident from her childhood inspired this story about best friends who do everything together at school, including eat lunch. Lily's choice of sandwich is peanut butter and jelly while Salma's is hummus on pita, and each girl thinks the other's fare is "weird" or "gross." When Lily finally vocalizes her opinion, the two exchange heated words, leading schoolmates to take sides and toss out nastier insults ("You look funny! You dress dumb!"), eventually escalating into a messy, cafeteria-wide food fight. Message trumps realism: the speed with which the girls make peace-after sampling one another's sandwiches-is as unlikely as the food fight itself. A foldout spread amplifies the readily apparent themes of acceptance and sharing, as the girls and their classmates enjoy a buffet of international foods. Featuring pastel hues, Tusa's (Fred Stays with Me!) wispy mixed-media artwork assuredly depicts the bond between the protagonists and adds dollops of humor-such as the food that gets wedged into the stern lunch lady's bouffant-to this well-intentioned if predictable story. PW"The day Lily stops eating her peanut butter and jelly sandwich to tell Salma her hummus and pita sandwich looks yucky and vice versa is the day they stop being friends. Their collaborative art projects end. They no longer play on the swings or jump rope together, and, at lunch time, they sit at different tables. As their story spreads across the school, so does intolerance. Students begin choosing sides in the cafeteria and calling each other "Jelly heads" and "Chickpea brains." When the two girls get caught in the middle of a food fight and called to the principal's office, they decide it's time to make some changes. The first is accomplished over their sandwich lunch; the second, over a multicultural smorgasbord, the latter depicted on a foldout of an enormous table laden with dishes and flags. Soft watercolor cartoon illustrations portray a lively student body and a slightly forbidding principal. This engaging title reminds children that having the courage to try new things can result in positive experiences. SLJ"The Queen of Jordan is the co-author of this lively picture book based on her nursery-school experiences that taught her to be "open to what seems foreign or strange." Salma and Lily are best friends at school, and lively, double page spreads show the girls having fun, drawing pictures, playing in the schoolyard, and eating lunch together, until one day Lily blurts out that Salma's sandwich (pita bread and hummus) looks kind of yucky, and Salma says the same about her friend's peanut butter and jelly ("looks gross, and it smells bad, too"). The harmonious pictures change to show angry standoffs, and other kids choose sides, shout insults, and begin a huge food fight. Finally, after a visit to the principal's office, Salma and Lily feel ashamed. They taste each other's sandwiches (yummy!), hug, and trade lunch. The story is preachy, and food makes a too-easy peacemaker. But preschoolers will recognize the school drama of friends and enemies and the messy confrontations that are resolved. Booklist" Kelly DiPucchio (www.kellydipucchio.com) has written several children's picture books including the New York Times bestseller Grace for President, Bed Hogs, Liberty's Journey , and Mrs. McBloom, Clean Up Your Classroom! A graduate of Michigan State University, Kelly lives in southern Michigan with her husband and three children. Read more

Features & Highlights

  • Lily and Salma are best friends. They like doing all the same things, and they always eat lunch together. Lily eats peanut butter and Salma eats hummus-but what's that between friends? It turns out, a lot. Before they know it, a food fight breaks out. Can Lily and Salma put aside their differences? Or will a sandwich come between them? The smallest things can pull us apart-until we learn that friendship is far more powerful than difference. In a glorious three-page gatefold at the end of the book, Salma, Lily, and all their classmates come together in the true spirit of tolerance and acceptance.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
60%
(407)
★★★★
25%
(170)
★★★
15%
(102)
★★
7%
(47)
-7%
(-48)

Most Helpful Reviews

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A Message of Inspiration

Her Majesty Queen Rania has brought us such an inspiring tale! I am such a strong advocate of "bridging the gap" between cultures and ideas...sharing, growing, learning. I highly recommend this sweet story!
44 people found this helpful
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An inspiring and heartwarming tale which promotes cross-cultural understanding

Her Majesty Queen Rania of Jordan is known for her humanitarian work and I'm especially appreciative of her efforts to make education accessible to the more than 70 million children who are deprived of education throughout the world. "The Sandwich Swap" can be seen as part of her effort to promote cross-cultural understanding amongst young readers. It is a heartwarming picture book with an inspiring and positive message. The story is inspired by an experience during Her Majesty Queen Rania of Jordan's own childhood. In the book, two girls, Lily and Salma are best friends, but that close friendship is put to the test one day during lunchtime when each girl tells the other that her lunch seems gross. Salma and Lily come from different cultural backgrounds and their lunches reflect this difference, i.e. Salma brings a hummus sandwich to school and Lily eats a PBJ sandwich. Will this spell the end of the girls' friendship, or will they find a way to see past their differences and celebrate their friendship?

The illustrations by Tricia Tusa are delightful to look at, especially in the scene where there is a food fight - truly cute and hilarious! This is a picture book that is appropriate for children ages 4-8, and might be used in the Pre-K- early elementary classroom to discuss cultural differences and how to appreciate diversity and the uniqueness of other cultures. It is never too early to inculcate a tolerance and appreciation of those deemed 'different', especially in the global context of an increasingly connected world.
28 people found this helpful
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My children and I really liked this book

My children and I really liked this book. About two girls who are best friends, then one day they get into a fight about how gross the others sandwich is. The story really displays to kids how arguments start over the silliest of things. Also how the argument can get out of hand if you let you temper/anger get the best of you.
I really loved how the girls in the end realized that friends don't hold grudges and worked together to solve the problem that got out of hand with everyone, including themselves.

On a side note, something I did not care for in the story that brought my review down. The fact that they had name calling in the story and used words like stupid and dumb. I think for a children's book authors should refrain from using name calling or using those strong words. Because my children at least, think of those words like curse words, super mean. I think our society, as well as, children have grown to know name calling, words like those, and hate all to well.

Other than that part, the book it was a cute read that we enjoyed. I read this aloud so I skipped over the name calling part.
13 people found this helpful
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Teach Kids Diversity the Easy Way: Through Food!

My daughter is biracial (half Indian and half White). She appears white, which presented an interesting dynamic for her in her multicultural school. She was also the only Muslim in her class. I gifted her Montessori primary class (3-6 year olds) this book on the occasion of her birthday. The discussion was one the kids could understand: "weird food." A reading of it at story time sparked an interesting talk about accepting differences, and I believe it made her experience at school a little nicer, with people having a bit more understanding of her. Also, she loved that it was written by a queen.
11 people found this helpful
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Absolutely Wonderful and Relatable

Our girls are learning about real life Princesses/Queens and what it means for them to be a true Princess. We have assigned Queen Rania as one of the Queens for our girls to learn about/from with what it means to be a true princess. When we read this it was not only a wonderful connection but perfect timing and completely relatable to our 1st and 2nd grade girls!!! Thank you for being a difference maker!!!
7 people found this helpful
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Excellent buy!!

If you're reading these reviews debating whether or not to buy the book, BUY IT!! I bought this book (a few actually) for gifts for friends who are teachers (for their classrooms) and for friends who are starting to have children. I have been to Jordan before, and seeing the illustrations made me feel like I was back there! The font is classic black and standard size, so its not distracting at all for kids to read. The moral of the story (I think) is fantastic for kids to be exposed to early: differences in cultures, traditions, eating habits, etc., but shows kids how to embrace cultures in really easy to understand ways. The illustrations aren't overboard and distracting either. I bought this book for a friend who has a 2 yr old daughter, but I would not hesitate buying it for either male or female in elementary school. The message of story, and especially to see the ending is really heartwarming.
6 people found this helpful
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Kirkus Says ...

From Kirkus Reviews: "... a gatefold depicts a long picnic table overflowing with ethnic food and happy kids. Tusa's whimsical illustrations spice up the story. Her large, vivacious drawings contribute character and comic touches, especially to the food fight, but there is one notable omission in this story of cultural understanding: Absent from the picnic table's array of flags identifying ethnicities (which include Iceland, Greece and Mexico among others, in addition to the United States and Jordan) is the Israeli flag-a hugely sad missed opportunity."

Omission? I think not. I feel confident that this was carefully calculated and anything but an oversight. Shame on the author, illustrator, and publisher!
6 people found this helpful
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A good story and a good discussion starter

This book with its charming watercolour illustrations holds the interest of children easily. It can also be used as a discussion starter in a classroom or home setting.

I read it to the first graders in our school at the end of the school year and each group was enthralled by the story and readily identified with the characters.

As well as being used to discuss cultural differences, the story could also be used to discuss friendship or being open to new experiences and as an introduction to foods that are specific to different cultures.
5 people found this helpful
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sandwich swap

This book is a great read for children aged 3 years an up! It is also a great story for adults too!
I like that it is written by a queen.
The simple text and lovely illustrations make it a joy to read.
I think many Early Childhood Education settings could make great use of this book as an initial discussion about similarities and differences. A great book to enhance of begin discussions about equality.
4 people found this helpful
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Good book and good life lesson!

This is a really good book about differences and learning to cooperate. It really teaches kids that we aren't all the same and aren't going to like the same things, but we can accept and respect each other anyways. My 7 year old daughter really liked it. Cute book!
3 people found this helpful