Join Books.org — it's free

Nature & the Natural World - General & Miscellaneous, Economics & Economic History, Social Issues - General & Miscellaneous, Fiction - General & Miscellaneous
Bella's Chocolate Surprise by Adam Guillain β€” book cover

Bella's Chocolate Surprise

by Adam Guillain, Elke Steiner
Available on Bookshop Write a review

Books.org participates in affiliate programs including Bookshop.org and the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program. We may earn a commission from qualifying purchases made through links on this page, at no additional cost to you.

Log in to track your reading progress.

Overview

Lessons about fair trade are at the center of this adventure that begins on Bella's birthday. Her mother has baked a chocolate cake and, delicious though it is, Bella begins to wonder where chocolate comes from. With the help of her friend the Quetzal bird, Bella harnesses the powers of her mystical pendant and flies to Ghana in West Africa, where she befriends a group of children working in the cacao fields. She soon learns that they are part of a collective that guarantees a fair income to workers and pays for the children to go to school. Delighting in her new cross-cultural friendships, Bella starts to plan how to get people from home involved in supporting fair-trade practices around the world.

Synopsis

Lessons about fair trade are at the center of this adventure that begins on Bella's birthday. Her mother has baked a chocolate cake and, delicious though it is, Bella begins to wonder where chocolate comes from. With the help of her friend the Quetzal bird, Bella harnesses the powers of her mystical pendant and flies to Ghana in West Africa, where she befriends a group of children working in the cacao fields. She soon learns that they are part of a collective that guarantees a fair income to workers and pays for the children to go to school. Delighting in her new cross-cultural friendships, Bella starts to plan how to get people from home involved in supporting fair-trade practices around the world.

Trans Fair USA newsletter

A lively, fast-paced read, mixing magical elements and realism, underpinned by positive messages about cross-cultural friendship, working together, and the benefits of fair trade.

About the Author, Adam Guillain


Adam Guillain is the author of the Bella Balistica series and an educational consultant. He is a former writer-in-residence at the Roald Dahl Museum and Story Centre. Elke Steiner is a comic book artist and the illustrator of Bella's Brazilian Football.

Reviews

There are no reviews yet. Log in to write one.

Editorials

Children's Literature

Children will enjoy biting into this delicious story, which is best enjoyed with a bite of chocolate!

Edmonton's Child

A lively, fast-paced read.

Parents Express

Travel with Bella to West Africa as she discovers where chocolate comes from.

School Library Journal

Boldly outlined, the pictures give readers a sense of life in a remote West African village and offer facts about chocolate and cacao harvesting.

The Fair Trade Beat

Mix[es] magical elements and realism, underpinned by positive messages about cross-cultural friendship, working together, and the benefits of fair trade.

Trans Fair USA newsletter

A lively, fast-paced read, mixing magical elements and realism, underpinned by positive messages about cross-cultural friendship, working together, and the benefits of fair trade.

Ultraviolet Underground blog

This book is not only multicultural, it also teaches children about fair trade and responsible shopping.

Children's Literature - Suzanna E. Henshon

Bella Balistica was born in Guatemala but now lives with Annie, her adoptive mother, in London. One day Bella finds a magical pendant that once belonged to her birth mother and she flies off to Ghana with a Quetzal bird for an amazing adventure. Bella and the bird see how cacao beans are transformed into Bella's favorite food, chocolate. Bella is surprised at how hard the children work to harvest the cacao beans, never complaining or getting the opportunity to taste the fruits of their labor, chocolate. Can Bella do something to help these children? The Fair Trade Company pays for their food, school fees, and medical supplies, but Bella wishes her friends could eat a bite of chocolate, the finished product of the cacao beans they grow. Eventually Bella leaves so she can celebrate her birthday with her mother. Once she is home, Bella decides to send chocolate to her new friends in Ghana. Children will enjoy biting into this delicious story, which is best enjoyed with a bite of chocolate! Reviewer: Suzanna E. Henshon, Ph.D.

School Library Journal

Gr 2-4- Bella, introduced in Bella Balistica and the African Safari (Milet, 2007), is once again united with her animal twin, the Quetzal bird, through the magic in a pendant once owned by her Guatemalan birth mother. The bird takes her to Ghana, where she helps some children with the cacao harvest and learns how they prepare the seeds used to make chocolate. While the work is difficult, the children's family receives Fair Trade money that pays living and school expenses. When Bella returns to London to enjoy her birthday celebration, complete with chocolate cake, she resolves to send chocolate to the Ghanaian children, who have never experienced its taste. Boldly outlined, the pictures depict Ghanaians, most in Western clothing, hard at work cheerfully harvesting fancifully colored cacao pods. Thatched huts; two women, one carrying a basket on her head and the other a baby on her back; and lush vegetation give readers a sense of life in a remote West African village. Although this story, sprinkled with British expressions, is a rather heavy-handed endorsement for Fair Trade products, it does offer some facts about chocolate and cacao harvesting.-Marianne Saccardi, formerly at Norwalk Community College, CT

Book Details

Published
May 1, 2008
Publisher
Milet Publishing,Ltd.
Pages
32
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9781840595055

More by Adam Guillain

Similar books