Reviews

The Giant Jam Sandwich by John Vernon Lord, Janet Burroway

mags_5037's review against another edition

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adventurous funny lighthearted slow-paced

3.75

coinchantal's review against another edition

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4.0

What a funny verse story about a giant jam sandwich that is made and used because of an invaded by wasps. Nice 70 ties like drawings and good imagination for the story.

This book is in the [b:1001 Children's Books You Must Read Before You Grow Up|6936332|1001 Children's Books You Must Read Before You Grow Up|Julia Eccleshare|https://i.gr-assets.com/images/S/compressed.photo.goodreads.com/books/1342805030l/6936332._SX50_.jpg|7168376] challenge I am doing.

kittenesque's review against another edition

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I remember reading this as a child and had to get a copy as an adult.

lee_hillshire's review against another edition

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No thoughts, head empty.

mat_tobin's review against another edition

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4.0

This is a classic in the canon of children's literature and picture books. It tells the story of how, as a collective, the people of Itching Down solve the problem of a wasp invasion. The verses are catchy and children always like the sense of rhythm that the bring but it has always been John Vernon Lord's coloured ink and crayon pictures that always captured me. So many little stories taking place and a proper sense of middle-England feel to it.

yetilibrary's review against another edition

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5.0

I first read this book when I was a little kid, and it's been a lifelong favorite. Is there a better book about sandwich-making? I SUBMIT THAT THERE IS NOT.

joelevard's review against another edition

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5.0

As a kid, I was pretty much fascinated with any book that had giant, colorful pictures of food, so it only makes sense that my two favorites were Cloudy With a Chance of Meatballs and this, The Giant Jam Sandwich. Despite the more varied foodstuffs on display in the former, I have to give the edge to the latter, because it actually showed people making the giant food instead of just being pelted with it from above. Kids like to know the process, I guess.

So the idea here is that all these wasps have descended upon a sleepy hamlet like a biblical plague, and the best plan the townsfolk can come up with is to make a giant jam sandwich. This will attract all the wasps, who will be stuck in the jam, squished by the top piece of bread, and carted away. These people are to be praised for an environmentally friendly (though hardly cruelty-free) solution, even if it is a bit wasteful, considering the global starvation epidemic (possible metaphorical exploration for later: wasps = undesirable ethnic communities, story as gentrification parable?).

Making a giant sandwich isn't as easy as you'd think, though, and it is really a team effort: the dough-making operation fills an entire room, and later it is left to rise on flatbed trucks. An oven is constructed, the size of a warehouse. Jam is carted in dump trucks and spread over the bread with trowels. The top piece of bread is suspended in midair by helicopters, waiting for the trap to be sprung.

I probably liked this book because I liked sandwiches, so found the idea of a giant one quite appealing. Somehow, despite the presence of this image, which is really, really disgusting when you think about it:



It kind of reminds me of the time I went to Cedar Point amusement park on the one day of the year all the mayflies hatch. You could see big clouds of them roiling in the air, and sometimes while on the roller coasters, you would zoom through the swarms at 75 mph. So, keep that mouth closed. Might want to shut your eyes too.

Facebook 30 Day Book Challenge Day 21: Favorite picture book from childhood.

snowelf's review against another edition

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4.0

I can see why this has become a classic, it's a fun, quirky story and some of the pictures are really fascinating. A book to read again and again ...

katalina_julia's review against another edition

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3.0

The names are strange, and it has interesting vocabulary for a children's book. The plot is interesting though.

laura_mcloughlin's review against another edition

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5.0

A favorite of mine from childhood that Kathryn has recently re-discovered. Certainly an ingenious (but unlikely to be successful in real life) solution to a wasp problem.