Ratings1
Average rating5
Suzette sells a variety of her crepes, or French pancakes, from the street cart she takes all over Paris. Includes a recipe, a short glossary of French words used, brief notes on Paris sites, and more.
Reviews with the most likes.
If they only allow me one book about Paris when I go to the nursing home some day, this will be the book I take with me.
Suzette is selling crêpes all over Paris—a street on the Left Bank, outside the Louvre, near Notre-Dame, and many more spots—and, through her travels around the city, she shares with her readers French vocabulary, French art, and even a recipe for crêpes.
After being out of print for some years, Crêpes by Suzette is now, happily, back in a lovely paperback edition.
BOOK APP REVIEW:
It was the Paris setting that persuaded me to review my first-ever book app.
Crêpes by Suzette is a book app that was developed from
the children's picture book of the same name written by Monica Wellington.
Although the book itself is now out of print,
I was, happily, able to find a copy of the actual book at my public library.
It was a taste test.
I read the real book first.
Then I went through the book app.
And the result?
I loved the real book.
But...oh, I hate to admit this...I loved the app, too
.
Here are the things I loved about the book and the app:
1. Both the book and the app have the crêpe recipe.
2. On the app, you can read the story to yourself or it will read the story to you.
3. On the app, the story can be translated into French, Spanish, German, Japanese, and Italian.
4. On the app, there is wonderful French music and French sounds in the background. (The author said she collected these in Paris on her digital recorder.)
5. On the app and in the book, there is a map of Paris with all the stops highlighted in the story.
6. On the app, there is a crêpe maker's demo video.
7. On the app, there is a crêpe cooking lesson.
8. In the book, it is explained that Suzette's customers in the story are based on figures from famous paintings and sculptures by French artists.
9. In the book, there is a glossary of French words used in the story.
Conclusion: Magnifique!
2021 READING
I had pulled this book out to read to my granddaughter, and Annie looked at me in surprise, saying, “I have this book on my computer!” We got out her iPad, my old iPad, and she was right...there was the app. What fun we had, reading the story and watching the little videos that accompany the text. Now we just need to make the crepes together.