One Potato, Two Potato
by
Cynthia DeFelice & Andrea U'ren
Order:
USA
Can
Farrar Straus & Giroux, 2006 (2006)
Hardcover
Reviewed by Hilary Daninhirsch
M
r. and Mrs. O'Grady are a poverty-stricken, elderly couple. Their only companions are each other. They live simply in a room with one chair, one table, one bed, one blanket, and one raggedy coat that they share. The O’Grady's also share one potato per day: '
Mr. and Mrs. O'Grady were so poor they dug one potato from their little garden every day, called it breakfast, lunch, and supper, and considered themselves lucky to have it.
'
E
ven though the couple love each other dearly, more than anything they each wish for a friend.
O
ne day, while Mr. O'Grady is digging in the garden, he uncovers a giant pot, which he carries up the hill into the house. The couple eventually discovers the pot's magic powers: whatever goes inside the pot automatically doubles. Thus, one potato tossed into the pot yields two potatoes. Soon the O'Gradys begin multiplying their possessions, including their single gold coin.
W
hen Mrs. O'Grady trips into the pot, her husband pulls out - you guessed it - two Mrs. O'Gradys. When he bemoans the presence of an extra wife, since one wife is all he ever wanted, he throws himself into the pot, to create not only a husband for the second Mrs. O'Grady, but a friend for himself as well.
I
loved the ending, where the couples decide to bury the pot for someone else to find, since, with the new friendships, they have everything they could ever want. '
And from that day forward, all of the O'Gradys lived happily together. They were, they liked to say, simply beside themselves with joy.
' (NOTE:
beside themselves
is in italics).
I
t is unusual to see elderly people as main characters in a picture book, but the intended message will certainly be understood by young children. This sweet book tugs at the heartstrings while it celebrates friendship. I also liked the anti-materialism message. The sparse drawings are a perfect accompaniment to the text.
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