Ready, Set, Dough!
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- $10.99
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- $10.99
Publisher Description
From Kelly J. Baptist, the award-winning author of Isaiah Dunn Is My Hero, comes a story about Zoe Sparks, an over-enthusiastic cookie-dough seller who wishes to win a laptop from her school fundraiser. Of course, there's unexpected competition, bad music, strained friendships, and over-the-top ideas that go horribly wrong.
Spunky sixth-grader Zoe Sparks has discovered a unique way to get the laptop of her dreams—to win it! If Zoe can sell more tubs of cookie dough than anyone in her school, the laptop is hers. It’s the first step to becoming a prize-winning journalist! But her win-at-all-costs attitude is starting to drive a wedge between Zoe, her best friend Felix, and her family. Zoe may be a top cookie-dough seller in her class, but is winning the prize really worth it?
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Kentwood Academy sixth grader Zoe, an aspiring journalist, dreams of owning a Horizon WordPro GT laptop. Her parents aren't in a position to buy her an expensive device, however, so she splits her time between the computers at the library and her older brother's friend's house to crank out her column for the school's paper. When Kentwood's Spring fundraiser rolls around—during which students sell cookie dough to help fund their extracurriculars and win prizes—Zoe realizes that one of the fundraising rewards is a WordPro. She persuades her best friend Felix to help her come up with ideas to win the competition, but selling cookie dough isn't easy—especially when the competition, privileged classmate Amaya, has access to her affluent family's connections to drive sales. Zoe becomes laser-focused on achieving her goals, and uses any opportunity to sell cookie dough, even if it means missing family and friends' important milestones or putting herself in potentially dangerous situations. Baptist explores themes of class and wealth disparity through Zoe's stubbornly determined first-person POV, and enriches the narrative with distinct and unforgettably rendered characters. Protagonists are racially diverse. Ages 8–10.