About this item
Highlights
- In the Garden of Eden, as soon as God buried Vegetables in the ground, and put Fruits on trees and vines, the Fruits began to argue among themselves.
- 7-8 Years
- 11.1" x 9.5" Hardcover
- 32 Pages
- Juvenile Fiction, Religious
Description
About the Book
"In the Garden of Eden, God buried the vegetables and put the fruits where they could be seen. Wanting easy picking, the caretakers of the Garden listen to the snake, pick the apples, and suffer the consequences"--Book Synopsis
In the Garden of Eden, as soon as God buried Vegetables in the ground, and put Fruits on trees and vines, the Fruits began to argue among themselves. "I am hardiest," said Apple. "I am sweetest," said Grape. "Enough!" said God, sending two caretakers to the Garden. "Eat me!" the Fruits called to the caretakers. "Listen to the Fruits," the snake hissed. Wanting things to be easy was the first real problem in the Garden. It was much easier for the caretakers to pick the Fruits than to dig up the Vegetables, so the caretakers listened to the snake. One of the lessons of this story: Growing food begins with hard work.
Review Quotes
"This high-ly rec-om-mend-ed book is light-ly moral and deeply spir-i-tu-al." --Jewish Book Council
-- (7/8/2024 12:00:00 AM)