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THERE'S NO SUCH THING AS VEGETABLES by Kyle Lukoff

THERE'S NO SUCH THING AS VEGETABLES

by Kyle Lukoff ; illustrated by Andrea Tsurumi

Pub Date: Feb. 27th, 2024
ISBN: 9781250867841
Publisher: Henry Holt

A lesson in agriculture has larger implications in this deep dive into what constitutes a vegetable.

Sent to the community garden next door to pick some veggies for a meal, young Chester, who presents as Asian, is quick to discover that every supposed “vegetable” he encounters declares itself to be something else entirely. The broccoli claims to be a flower, the potato, a root, and the kale, a leaf. In fact, the supposed veggies all make the startling argument that there’s no such thing as vegetables. Chester attempts to fight back with facts, but every definition falls apart. Veggies are plants? So are trees. They don’t have sugar, suggests Chester. What about sugar beets? They’re good in salads? So’s bacon! Lukoff isn’t attempting to break down taxonomies but is instead making a larger point about the sometimes arbitrary ways in which humans label our world. Larger points about semantic satiation and social constructs may be lost on the elementary school crowd, but a story about plants arguing their way out of a salad bowl is funny no matter how you slice it. It helps enormously that the art is by Tsurumi, a master of hilarious visual gags and irate tomatoes, who brings to life in a cartoon-based format the gently defiant edibles.

Subversion in the salad! Destabilization with dressing! Social constructs fall by the wayside in this clever review.

(Picture book. 4-7)