I spent the next three months reading More Spaghetti, I Say! to myself and anyone else who crossed my path. After my kindergarten year, the hotter-than-usual temperatures kept me indoors curled up with my summer reading list. More Spaghetti, I Say! by Rita Golden Gelman will forever be the book that taught me to read. Obviously, it took years of dedicated elementary teachers and countless nights of shared reading with my parents and older sisters, but in my mind, it boils down to one summer with one book.
FREDDY SPAGHETTI MONSTER HOW TO
I spent the next three m I have a very fond childhood memory of the moment I learned how to read. I have a very fond childhood memory of the moment I learned how to read. It is definitely a fantastic book with these words that I heed.Ĭhildren everywhere will definitely love the wackiness of this book,įor children ages four and up, it is definitely worth a look! So overall, “More Spaghetti, I Say!” was such a joy to read! It really features the prominence of spaghetti in the air!
I love the images of spaghetti everywhere, Jack Kent’s artwork is such a delight to see!Īll the characters are as cute as can be! Which just goes to show how wacky this book really is, I sing. I wish I had a wacky friend like Minnie in the city!Īlthough I think it is weird to put spaghetti on everything, Minnie and Freddy’s dialogue with each other was wacky and witty! If I could eat a thousand bowls of spaghetti, then I am ready!
This book made me want to eat some more spaghetti, I could read this book all day in the sun. Rita Golden Gelman’s writing was just so fun! Including putting spaghetti on pancakes and ice cream, Minnie sings.Ĭan Freddy get Minnie off her spaghetti fever? With that spaghetti, Minnie did all kinds of things, More Spaghetti, I say, said Minnie, all happy,Īlthough Freddy was thinking this was getting too sappy. She wanted that spaghetti more than she wanted to play with Freddy. There were two monkeys named Minnie and Freddy,įreddy wanted to play, all excited and ready.īut all Minnie wanted was her precious SPAGHETTI,
With that spaghetti, This is yet another special review where I review one of my most favorite books from my childhood in rhyme, since this particular children’s book is told in a rhyme! More Spaghetti, I say, said Minnie, all happy, Although Freddy was thinking this was getting too sappy. But all Minnie wanted was her precious SPAGHETTI, She wanted that spaghetti more than she wanted to play with Freddy. This is yet another special review where I review one of my most favorite books from my childhood in rhyme, since this particular children’s book is told in a rhyme! There were two monkeys named Minnie and Freddy, Freddy wanted to play, all excited and ready. I am eating spaghetti!"Holy Dawkins! I think I've found it! Smoking ray-gun proof that pre-final 't' was voiced in late twentieth century American! Yes, the other AIs will be sick with envy when they see my article in the Lunar and Inner Planets Journal of Language Change, I must post it without delay.".
I can just see them studying the following verses: No I cannot, I say! This book, which I read in the dentist's waiting room this morning, could well be useful to some future academic. I can just see them studying the following verses: No I cannot, I say! No I cannot! No Freddy! I can't come out to play! I am eating spaghetti!" As one of Cecily's reviews pointed out the other day, historical linguists figure out how language was pronounced in the past by examining indirect evidence, above all poetry: knowing that something is supposed to rhyme can provide a vital clue. As one of Cecily's reviews pointed out the other day, historical linguists figure out how language was pronounced in the past by examining indirect evidence, above all poetry: knowing that something is supposed to rhyme can provide a vital clue.