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A girl in Santo Domingo tells how cocoa is harvested during the late 1800s while at the same time her counterpart in Maine tells about the harvesting of ice.
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SUMMARY: A girl in Santo Domingo tells how cocoa is harvested during the late 1800s while at the same time her counterpart is Maine tells about the harvesting of ice.

REVIEW: This could almost be one of those topsy-turvy books were one story reads from the front and then you flip it over and read the second story starting from the back because it is the same story from two different points of view from two different locations that intersect on the high seas. Both girls, similar in age, have very different lives and are in awe of the their counterpart’s life and home. It is interesting to see that Santo Domingo needs ice to make their cocoa ice and Maine needs the cocoa to create their chocolate ice cream.

NOTE: The front endpage shows a large area map with the sea trip route marked. Did you notice the compass has in its center a cocoa pod cut in half showing the cocoa seeds inside

ACTIVITY: Can you compare the two girls, their homes, their families, the climate, their culture, their clothes, their treasures? ( )
  pjburnswriter | Dec 11, 2020 |
This book of two different views of 2 stories that meet through other characters who are not the main ones but still express the same value. I place a 3 star because i fell the story is consumed with so many words on one page that i could or would lose the k-3 audience. It explores 2 hard working families and has a good imagery but the transition between the 2 worlds were shaky and were not explained well or transition well for i was confused so i think it will confuse a younger audience, ( )
  tnorris23 | Sep 4, 2019 |
This book is about two little girls who have families on opposite sides of the cocoa/ice trade. We see one little girl on a hot island with her family harvesting cacao and making chocolate. We trace the trade to another little girl who lives in Maine. Her uncle works for an ice company, harvesting and storing the ice. This story shows students that two little girls who live in two different places actually live similar lives. I think this story also shows students how we are all connected throughout the world with items that we trade and give. ( )
  vviverito | Sep 2, 2019 |
A girl from Santo Domingo helps her father harvest cacao while a girl in Maine watches her father cut ice blocks from the river. This a fascinating story to me because these two girls are in entirely different worlds. It shows that what we think the world is like to somebody else isn't actually what it is like. ( )
  Paigealyssa | Feb 4, 2016 |
From judging the cover, I thought this book was going to be about the differences of hot weather places and then the cold. But, it turned out to be much more than that. I loved this book and the complexity of the diverse background of the wonderful characters. For being a children's book, we received so much history and character knowledge, in such a short period of time. The book is about a two girls living in very different areas of the world. Their two different worlds, are not that different after all. A beautiful read about ice and cocoa and how they interlace. This book is a must for any classroom library. ( )
  jaelynculliford | Oct 2, 2014 |
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A girl in Santo Domingo tells how cocoa is harvested during the late 1800s while at the same time her counterpart in Maine tells about the harvesting of ice.

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