

desertcart.com: The Chocolate Touch: 9780688161330: Patrick Skene Catling, Margot Apple: Books Review: Perfect for Third Grade Book Clubs! - I’m a third-grade teacher, and The Chocolate Touch is one of my students’ favorite book club reads! The reading level is just right for this age—challenging enough to keep them engaged, but not frustrating. The story is a timeless classic that sparks great discussions about choices, consequences, and kindness. My students always beg to keep reading each day. Highly recommend for classroom libraries or family read-alouds! Review: Wonderful read aloud for kids - My kids all loved it. Ages 12-3. They found the story line captivating and hysterical at the same time. Would recommend to anyone looking for a quick, captivating read that teaches a lesson on selfishness and selfcenteredness


| Best Sellers Rank | #3,908 in Books ( See Top 100 in Books ) #12 in Children’s Books about Libraries & Reading #34 in Children's Chapter Books (Books) #143 in Children's Classics |
| Book 1 of 1 | John Midas Series |
| Customer Reviews | 4.6 4.6 out of 5 stars (5,860) |
| Dimensions | 5.12 x 0.26 x 7.62 inches |
| Edition | Reprint |
| Grade level | 3 - 7 |
| ISBN-10 | 0688161332 |
| ISBN-13 | 978-0688161330 |
| Item Weight | 15.2 ounces |
| Language | English |
| Print length | 128 pages |
| Publication date | May 23, 2006 |
| Publisher | HarperCollins |
| Reading age | 6 - 9 years, from customers |
L**Y
Perfect for Third Grade Book Clubs!
I’m a third-grade teacher, and The Chocolate Touch is one of my students’ favorite book club reads! The reading level is just right for this age—challenging enough to keep them engaged, but not frustrating. The story is a timeless classic that sparks great discussions about choices, consequences, and kindness. My students always beg to keep reading each day. Highly recommend for classroom libraries or family read-alouds!
G**S
Wonderful read aloud for kids
My kids all loved it. Ages 12-3. They found the story line captivating and hysterical at the same time. Would recommend to anyone looking for a quick, captivating read that teaches a lesson on selfishness and selfcenteredness
R**A
Cute book. Easy to read.
My young daughter loves this book. She is always recommending it to people.
C**H
Great book!
Good quality book and fast delivery! My daughter really enjoyed the book. It was part of her summer reading for school and easy for her to read with some picture pages.
M**E
Excellent
Excellent
A**S
Great book
My daughter is reading this in her 1st grade class and she has really stepped up her reading because she loves this book so much. It was the 1sr book she requested by name.
J**E
Great kid’s book
This review is given by my great grandson who loves this book. He did not want me to stop reading the book because he was so interested in seeing what would happen next. In the end my great grandson chose the right answer and chose to be unselfish. A great book for teaching kids about being kind.
C**R
John is a nice boy who gets in trouble once in a while ...
The Chocolate Touch Reviewed by Jude Foster The Chocolate Touch is the story of a boy named John Midas. John is a nice boy who gets in trouble once in a while but is mostly good. He has a nice mom and dad, a little sister, and lives a happy life. His one bad fault is eating too much candy. He likes all candy, but especially chocolate. He spends all his money on candy and never shares the candy he buys. One day, while walking to the candy shop, he finds a coin on the sidewalk. It reads, "JM" on one side and has a picture of a fat boy on the other side. He thinks that is interesting because "JM" are his initials. He goes into the shop and asks if he could use the coin to buy anything. The man says that it is the only kind of money he accepts. John buys a big box of chocolate, takes it home, goes to bed, and eats a bite before falling asleep. The next morning, this toothpaste tastes like chocolate, so he eats it. When he drinks his orange juice, it tastes like chocolate. He drinks the whole glass even though he doesn't like orange juice. Even his bacon and eggs taste like chocolate. John has a habit of chewing on his gloves when he's thinking about something. So when he chews on his gloves he eats right through the leather because it tastes like chocolate. That day he eats half of a friend's silver dollar and drinks chocolate from the water fountain. John starts to get tired of chocolate. Finally it goes too far when he gets a kiss from his mom. He wishes he had never eaten that special chocolate he bought with the special coin. He runs to the candy shop, talks to the shop owner, and learns an important lesson on being greedy and wanting too much of a good thing. I recommend this book. It is fun, entertaining, and easy to read.
L**A
I read this book when I was a kid, so I bought it and read it again. John Midas, like most kids, is mad about candy, especially chocolate, and he's a bit of a pain but a nice lad, apparently. He comes across a mysterious candy shop one day and the shopkeeper is equally mysterious. On the way there he finds a mysterious coin with a fat boy on it and his own initials; he could give it to his friend Susan to start a coin collection, but naaahh, he'd rather go and spend it in there. And surprisingly it is enough to buy a huge, fancy box of chocolates with. So he sneaks back home with it - through the back, to avoid being caught and told off - and hides it under his bed until bedtime. When it finally is bedtime, he opens up the box, takes out wrapper after wrapper and finds that the only chocolate in it is a small golden ball. He's a bit disappointed but he eats it anyway and it's delish. When he cleans his teeth the next morning he finds that the toothpaste tastes like chocolate - how did that happen? It's strange, but it still tastes delish. His little sister Mary thinks he's bluffing. But then the same thing happens when he's eating his breakfast; his bacon and eggs taste like chocolate somehow, his toast is suddenly chocolate flavoured, the butter becomes chocolate spread, marmalade basically becomes a kind of chocolate jam, and orange juice becomes chocolate juice. On his way to school he mistakenly puts the tip of his thumb in his mouth while he's got his old leather gloves on, and they turn into chocolate too. He gets pounced on by the school bully Spider Wilson who thinks he's being freakish, then tries to eat the gloves himself, only find, disgustedly, that it doesn't work for him. Eventually John realises it; the sweet he ate last night has given him a magic touch that enables him to turn anything that touches his mouth into chocolate. He turns his pencil into a chocolate pencil during a test and the list goes on... the novelty soon begins to wear off and at lunchtime he longs to taste something else for a change. He tries to eat his lunch in a way that doesn't touch his mouth but, damn and blast, it all turns into chocolate, and even the bloody cutlery and the glass he's drank from are transformed into cocao sculptures. He also loses his best friend Susan when he ruins a trinket of hers by making the mistake of putting it into his mouth. And then his precious trumpet is ruined - you can imagine what happened and how. Despite their early fallout, he goes to Susan's party and a game of duck apple gets ruined - I'll leave the details to your imagination. He is sick and tired of it all now, and wants it to stop. His dad sorts him out and he tries to show him the sweet shop, only to find that it has been bulldozed 😮 So Dad takes him to the doctor, who sees the whole weird phenomenon for himself, along with John's parents, when John tries to take a spoon of medicine. His parents are understandably very upset about their son's mysterious condition, and for once John is concerned about his parents. While comforting his tearful mum he accidentally turns her into a chocolate statue - shock, horror! 😮 It is the last straw, so he runs out of the house in exasperation, stumbles across where the sweet shop was and find that it's back there again, almost exactly as it was 😮 In the window he finds every single thing that has been turned into chocolate by him. He goes in and pleads with the man, vowing to change his ways, begging for his mum to be brought back to life. He has a talk with the man and realises it has all been a lesson, to teach him not to be selfish and greedy, and that too much of the same food and nothing else gets positively sickening after a while. You do feel sad for him at the point where he has lost his friends and just cannot stand chocolate anymore, but then you are glad for his sake, and his family and friends' sakes, that he has learned his lesson. He goes home and is relieved to find that his mum is back to life, and everything that was turned into chocolate returns to its original form. His wretched chocolate touch is gone and he enjoys a nice glass of milk in the normal way. He wants to go and say a last-minute thank you and goodbye to the shopkeeper, but when he gets there the shop has been mysteriously bulldozed - again 😮 So there you have it 😀 If you think the plot sounds like the kind of story that your child would enjoy, I suggest you buy them this book ☺ It doesn't matter that it was written in the '50s, because the story and the message behind it are the main things.
B**M
Estoy leyendo estelibro con mis alumnos, y les encanto!! La lección que transmite esta muy buena!!!
L**E
My 7 year old child loved the book. Nice book with a good moral.
N**D
This is such a great read-aloud in elementary school! We have fun with it every year.
T**S
Uma história de aventura muito boa, engraçada. Um garoto que amava chocolate, mas que ao longo da história, passou pelo desconforto de tudo o que colocava na boca, se transformava em chocolate. Uma história bem diferente, mas que coloca em perspectiva várias emoções vividas pelo garoto. Recomendo para crianças que já dominem minimamente a língua inglesa.
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