The bear who loved chocolate, by Leela Hope
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The bear who loved chocolate, by Leela Hope
Download Ebook The bear who loved chocolate, by Leela Hope
Want your children to eat healthy foods instead of just candy?
Chocolate Bear is about a bear cub who only wants to eat chocolate.
Chocolate for breakfast, lunch and dinner!
When he runs out of his favorite food he just cries and cries.
What will Chocolate Bear do? Where will he find more chocolate? Will he ever learn to eat other foods?
This beginner reader’s eBook will inspire your children to try new foods, and to solve basic problems.
Your children will enjoy full-color illustrations of Chocolate Bear, his mother and their neighborhood.
Chocolate Bear is a delightfully illustrated children’s book for you and your children to read together. With simple text, this story is suitable as a read aloud book for preschoolers or a self-read book for beginner readers.
The bear who loved chocolate, by Leela Hope- Amazon Sales Rank: #2923108 in Books
- Published on: 2015-06-17
- Original language: English
- Number of items: 1
- Dimensions: 8.50" h x .6" w x 8.50" l, .18 pounds
- Binding: Paperback
- 24 pages
Where to Download The bear who loved chocolate, by Leela Hope
Most helpful customer reviews
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful. LOVED this story! By Gail Christian Many years ago I heard a story (or perhaps it was a story on a TV episode) of a wise employer. He hired teenagers to work for him in his old country store or drug store (can't remember which now), and he would let them eat all the candy they wanted: it was a perk of the job.Now I want you to picture a store like the one in Little House on the Prairie or something Opie Taylor would have visited. Something of that era where you had the candy jars where you reached in and grabbed a handful or scoop full - NOT the stores of today where everything is in packages.Also picture the kid with a penny or nickel in his pocket for candy who was excited because that was a special treat.So now here comes this teenager to work for the store owner - probably his first boss, and he is literally the "kid in the candy store"! All the candy he wants for free! WOW! Who's gonna turn THAT down? He may be a kid, but he's not stupid!So between taking care of his duties as an employee the teenager tries as many of the different candies as he can. But then he starts to feel funny so he thinks he'd better stick with his favorite candies. Even then, by the end of the day the kid is so sick to his stomach he cannot stand to even LOOK at the candy - much less think of eating any more of it!Sure, the store owner lost some revenue for the candy the boy ate that day. But it was not nearly as much as he would probably have eaten over the course of his employment. So in the long run the store owner saved money, and he didn't have to worry about his employee "snitching" candy.This book reminds me of that story. The bear is the boy. All he wants to eat is chocolate. His mother cannot convince him to try fruits, veggies, yogurt, meats, etc. (And I could comment on that, but it would not have anything to do with the book so we will move forward....)One day circumstances were such that he ate so much chocolate he could not get up from the ground! He was too round, and his tummy hurt too much! But he finally had eaten so much chocolate he never wanted any more!That was when he discovered the other foods his mother wanted him to try were also delicious! This is something ALL our little "bears" need to learn!As for the reviewer who thought this was unrealistic: My daughter talks about eating too many blueberries as a child, and to this day she doesn't want ANYTHING with blueberries in it! She is 35 years old. So it IS a real situation. Just like the "kid in the candy store" or my daughter with the blueberries (or me and cooked cherries - although Nana DID make great cherry pie when I was little, OR my husband with a couple of foods he wouldn't eat for 25 or 30 years), the bear in this story learned there truly is "too much of a good thing". This story is NOT unrealistic on that point at all! My family is living proof of that. I know I haven't had a slice of cherry pie in almost 50 years (or anything else with cooked cherries).This is a great story for everyone. Although Mama Bear should never have let the little bear get away with eating only chocolate, he does learn a couple of valuable lessons: too much of a good thing can spoil it for you, and there are other good things out there. The only way to discover them is to TRY them!I would recommend this book to anyone trying to teach those lessons to their children. It is going in my KEEPER file!
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful. what do you expect for a buck By Amazon Customer Story wasn't smooth and had an obvious message that wasn't woven into something interesting just smacked you in the face with an achy bear tummy for being too full of chocolate to miraculously loving veggies instead. My son was not impressed and said I could return it. He's only 2.
4 of 5 people found the following review helpful. Too much of a good thing - and some lessons in nutrition! By Grady Harp San Diego, California Author Leela Hope studied English Literature at Berkeley, earning a degree in 1989. Her writing covers a span of several genres, but she always returns to her first love, children's fiction. And it is there that her star shines brightest. Always finding something unique on which to base her stories, she makes each tale a learning experience for children as well as offering some pointers for parenting!In the terrific tradition of `Once upon a time' Hope introduces a bear who loved chocolate - and would eat no other food but chocolate. One day his cupboards were bare and for a bear with bare cupboards that means no chocolate! As he seeks help from his mother she insists there are other god thinks to eat besides chocolate - raspberry yogurt, strawberry popsicles, etc - but out bear only wants chocolate. The next day some children were out selling chocolate bars, and getting the scent of chocolate the bear ran after the children, scarring them so badly that they dropped all the chocolate bars they were selling and the bear ate all of the bars - so much so that his stomach bloated and he lost his hunger for chocolate. And from that day on he ate all the good foods his mother prepared but no more chocolate.As always Leela Hope does not force her message. She just drops it at our feet (along with some wonderful illustrations) and leaves the emphasis up to parents. This is another lovely book from the talented Leela Hope. Grady Harp, September 14
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