Hardcover
(Farrar, Straus and Giroux (BYR), March 30, 2010)
Jacob learned the rules of baking from watching Chef Monty on TV, and now he is ready to make his own peach pie in his Easy-On Oven. Even when things get messy and Jacob's parents say there is no more time for baking, he is determined to see his pie through to the end. Cari Best's tasty text and Melissa Sweet's scrumptious collage illustrations combine to make a picture book as satisfying as a perfect slice of pie.Easy as Pie is a 2011 Bank Street - Best Children's Book of the Year.
Paperback
(Macmillan General Reference, Oct. 1, 1990)
Briefly traces the history of pie and provides recipes for pastries, fillings, toppings, tarts, galettes, turnovers and savory, custard, chiffon, and frozen pies
Emily says "Yuck" whenever apples are mentioned, but when she and her older brother, Harry, sleep over at their grandparents' house, they all pick apples and make them into delicious pies.
MISS TABITHA PUSSYCAT was a quiet, sleek, old creature, and was so prim, that her friends called her an old maid; and some of them even said that she was an old cat, but they were the people who were not asked to her nice tea parties. When she gave a tea party, she sent her page Jacko to invite her friends. Jacko was a clever monkey, who had come from his last place at the Zoological Gardens, where he had been used to see a great deal of company....
A charming Alphabet book about an apple pie and all the things children are willing to do to get it. Follow the beautifully illustrated romping from A to Z.
In this spectacular recreation of one of the most beloved alphabet rhymes of all time, New York Times Best Illustrator Gennady Spirin brings to life the delicious and whimsical fortunes of an apple pie—through the alphabet! Look for the tiny butterfly in the picture where B bit it. Find the fox on the page where F fought for it. Discover hundreds of delightful details in these enchanting pictures each time the book is shared. A timeless celebration of the alphabet, and an incredible work of art by the great artist Gennady Spirin.
Introduces the letters A to Z while following the fortunes of a A charmingly illustrated Apple Pie. Illustrated by one of the most admired children's book illustrators of the Victorian British era; Kate Greenaway. Originally published in 1900 by Frederick Warne & Co. - London, New York, c1900.