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Amazon.com
Recommended
"Greg Tang is back with his bestselling approach to addition and subtraction: problem solving. By solving challenges that encourage kids
to "group" numbers rather than memorize formulas, even the most reluctant math learners are inspired to see math in a whole new way!
Math Potatoes is full of Tang and Briggs' trademark humor, wit, and extraordinary creativity. Tang has proven over and over that math can be fun,
and this new addition to his acclaimed series of mind-stretching math riddles is sure to be another hit."
Barnes & Noble
5 Star Rating, #1 New Release
"I've been lucky enough to view an advanced copy of this new book by Greg Tang. I think his work gets better and better every time a new book is released.
This book is more challenging, but if you have used his other books with your students, you will see how the concepts will help them solve the new problems.
My favorite is Vegtabullies...how creative!"
-- Teresa Dionisio, 5th grade teacher in Lincoln, MA
Booklist
"The seventh in Tang's math series, which includes The Grapes of Math (2000), this picture book uses all kinds of visual tricks to demonstrate how
to make arithmetic faster and easier. On each double-page spread, a rhyming verse has fun with a variety of subjects. Most rhymes are about foods -
including pickles, potatoes, and "flat-jacks"--and the bright, computer-generated pictures are as playful as the words.
This goes far beyond the usual simple counting book. The games are complex, the visuals are tricky, and although the rhyme seems straightforward
("Instead of adding row by row / Columns are the way to go"), readers must think carefully about adding, subtracting, and multiplying. "Imagine eight
in every row / Just subtract and you will know." The spacious, illustrated answer pages at the back explain the puzzles, which will be fun for classroom
use as well as for kids trying to find shortcuts in the counting jungle."
-- Hazel Rochman, Copyright © American Library Association
Children's Literature
"This is the newest title from the author of the acclaimed The Grapes of Math. With intricate games and cleverly-designed illustrations, readers are
challenged to solve various math problems. Each problem is presented as a spread. A poem on the left-hand side introduces the challenge. The right-hand
side features a strong and often humorous illustration of everything from musical notes to a spider web to penguins as the way to the solution.
Children are definitely encouraged to think "out of the box" in order to come up with the correct answers. Tang, in his introduction, says that his
aim is get kids to look for smarter, easier solutions and he certainly meets his objective. The answers to each problem are fully explained in the back
of the book. Teachers looking for a tool to make math more interesting will surely be happy with this book."
-- Sylvia Firth
Kirkus Reviews
"The seventh in a line of verse math-terpieces that began with Grapes of Math (2001), this offers 16 problem-solving shortcuts that involve
grouping numbers or items. Tang not only provides answers and methods in a closing key, he is generous with hints. Opposite digitally worked,
color-coded arrays of anywhere from 30 to 148 stars, sea shells, spiders, pickles, the titular potatoes, playing cards and the like, his verses
open with a pair of lively introductory couplets, set the problem with a third, then suggest an approach in the fourth: "Can you add up these
poor souls / For whom the bell already tolls? / In groups of ten you'll hear their cries, / 'Please don't turn us into fries!' " Even numerically
challenged readers can count on coming away with some time and labor saving techniques for toting things up."
PBS TeacherSource
Recommended
"Once again Tang and Briggs have produced a book to develop problem solving skills. The counting tasks in this collection at can be approached in
different ways. Grouping provides an answer in a jiffy. The problems and approach hints are in verse. A final section reveals and explains the solutions."
Publisher's Weekly
"Familiar friends escort readers back to school. The team behind The Grapes of Math offers a seventh title, Math Potatoes: Mind-Stretching Brain Food by
Greg Tang, illus. by Harry Briggs. Rhyming couplets once again help kids understand math through strategies such as grouping in patterns."
-- Copyright © 2005 Reed Business Information
School Library Journal
"Tang's seventh entry in a series that includes The Grapes of Math (2001) and Math-terpieces (2003, both Scholastic) is another winner.
Each spread includes a poem consisting of neatly rhymed couplets that first set a scene (I gaze into the evening sky,/Think great thoughts and wonder why)
and concludes with a hint or suggestion as to how the objects on the opposing page might most efficiently be grouped to arrive at a sum
(When you look up to the heavens,/Try to think in groups of sevens!).
There are no overt patterns so that, as Tang says in his author's note,
children are challenged to combine numbers in smart ways, not just obvious ways. The book concludes with clear diagrams and succinct explanations
providing the solutions. Briggs's computer-generated art is crisp, clear, and delightfully quirky. For example, Sock Hop features a loafer on guitar,
work boots on drums, and a high-heeled pump on keyboard. Puzzle-loving kids will pick this up on their own."
-- Grace Oliff, Copyright © Reed Business Information
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