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How My Parents Learned to Eat is a sweet story about a Japanese woman and an American man who meet and fall in love. They are shy about eating together because he doesn’t know how to use chopsticks she doesn’t know how to use a fork. Neither one of them wants to feel foolish while eating in front of the other, so they each find someone else to teach them.
After hours and hours and days and days of practice, they find the confidence to have dinner together. It was awkward for them at first, but they felt comfortable with each other after a while and begin talking about marriage.
How My Parents Learned to Eat is told from the perspective and point of their daughter. At the end of the story, she tells us what meals are like in their house. She says:
In our house, some days we eat with chopsticks and some days we eat with
knives and forks. For me, it’s natural.
About How My Parents Learned to Eat
Author's Summary: A young girl recounts the story of her parents'
courtship as her father, an American sailor stationed in Yokohama, and her
mother, a Japanese girl, overcome the problems of different cultures.
🍎 Title: How My Parents Learned to Eat
🍎 Author: Ina R. Friedman
🍎 Illustrator: Allen Say
🍎 Publisher: HMH Books for Young Readers
🍎 Date: April 27, 1987
🍎 Pages: 32
🍎 Title: How My Parents Learned to Eat
🍎 Author: Ina R. Friedman
🍎 Illustrator: Allen Say
🍎 Publisher: HMH Books for Young Readers
🍎 Date: April 27, 1987
🍎 Pages: 32
This post is part of the second annual Read Around the World Summer Reading
Series from Multicultural Kid Blogs.
Follow along all month long for global summer reading recommendations for
kids of all ages!
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