I Really Want the Cake (Digital Read Along)
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- $10.99
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- $10.99
Publisher Description
For fans of laugh-out-loud, mischievous storytime favorites like Pig the Pug, No, David!, and Dragons Love Tacos comes a deliciously funny story about trying to resist one of life's biggest temptations... CAKE!Everyone knows the feeling. First you smell it, then you see it...CAKE!It's on the table standing there, you cannot help but stop and stare.The icing looks like such a treat, it smells so chocolatey and sweet!And before long...YOU REALLY WANT THE CAKE. This deliciously funny story chronicles the battle of one little girl who tries, with all her might, to resist her greatest temptation: cake. Readers join our spunky, mischievous, and charming heroine and her devoted side-kick pup as the temptation mounts, and a little lick becomes a bite. With bouncing rhyming text from Simon Philip and bold, expressive illustrations from Lucia Gaggiotti, this story playfully tackles all-important themes of impulse control, truth-telling, and making amends (or at least trying to), with humor, authenticity, and heart. Including a recipe at the end of the story, I Really Want the Cake offers readers a universally relatable and tasty tale.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
"It's on the table sitting there./ I cannot help but stop and stare," says Philip's (Be More Bernard) protagonist as she gazes at an impressively decorated chocolate cake. She imagines herself and her canine comrade-in-arms as Wild West outlaws in a stand-off, eating utensils in double holsters. But the child's mother has posted a sign that leaves no wiggle room ("YOU MUST NOT EAT THE CAKE"), and so the duo endeavors to practice self-control. Graphic designer Gaggiotti's boisterous, crayonlike drawings show the girl and dog grumpily going through the motions, playing badminton and reading poetry. But it's no use once they sneak a few licks, the whole cake disappears in rapid order. Maybe Mom will forgive her if she makes a replacement how hard could it be? This diva of cake snatching commands every page, with her proclamations of entitlement (rendered in sprawling handwritten type), her extensive repertoire of operatic expressions, and a hairstyle that seems to have a life of its own especially after she's laid waste to the kitchen. In more ways than one, she really does take the cake. Ages 3 5.