Rude Dude's Book of Food: Stories Behind Some of the Crazy-Cool Stuff We Eat
Description
It's actually true that Mongol warriors rode with slabs of raw meat under their saddles then ate them that night in camp! It's actually true that Chinese archaeologists found 4,000-year-old noodles in an overturned cup. It's actually true that Americans buy $1 billion worth of chocolate each Valentine's Day. You think food is just stuff we eat!? Come on! There's a world full of great food stories out there--and Rude Dude's going to tell them!
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About the Author
Tim J. Myers is a writer, storyteller, songwriter, visual artist, and senior lecturer at Santa Clara University in Silicon Valley. His work has made the New York Times bestseller list for children's books, been reviewed with art in the Times, and been read aloud on NPR, among other honors; visit him at www.TimMyersStorySong.com.
Reviews
""Rude Dude's Book of Food" has powerful and poignant moments in between delightful fun and whimsy! It folds in history, from Alexander the Great to internment camps to the roots of fortune cookies, while focusing on interesting stories about foods kids love. And the tone of the 'Keep Being Awesome' health-tip sidebars was spot on!"
Barbara M. Burns, Ph.D. Professor and Director of Liberal Studies: Pre-Teaching and Child Studies, Santa Clara University
Children are exposed to literally thousands of messages about food each year in all types of media. The vast majority of these are marketing messages designed to manipulate and deceive, with the result that most kids have very little knowledge about the food they eat what it s made from, what its nutritional value is, and why it was created. Tim J. Myers' "Rude Dude's Book of Food" has a refreshing new voice that can break through the clutter with kid-friendly, and often sassy, explanations about the history of some of kids (and adults') favorite foods. "Rude Dude" takes us on a journey around the globe to pinpoint key moments in the history of foods like pizza, hamburgers, and chocolate. Myers celebrates the universality of some foods (like chocolate), and describes how different cultures customize them (like noodles/pasta).
"Rude Dude" celebrates food not for the prize inside the box or the superstar athlete who endorses it, but for authentic reasons like people around the world serving it at their celebrations, explorers taking it across oceans to new lands, or, in the words of the Dude himself, its general "awesomeness."
Katharine E. Heintz, Ph.D., Department of Communication, Santa Clara University
I love Tim J. Myers' "Rude Dude's Book of Food" it was so much fun to read! There is something about Tim's unique voice that made me want to read more. This style and this topic are perfect for children. They can learn this important information and at the same time have fun and be engaged in the