Catling, P.S. (1952). The chocolate
touch. New York: Harper Trophy.
Patrick Skene Catling’s modern
fantasy children’s chapter book, The
Chocolate Touch, tells what happens to a young boy who eats too much
chocolate. It won the Massachusetts
Children’s Book Award in 1989, the Utah Children’s Choice Honors Award in 1983,
and the Beehive Award from the Children’s Literature Association of Utah in
1983. The book is actually patterned after the myth of King Midas, whose magic
turned everything he touched to gold.
The main character and protagonist of the story,
John Midas, loves chocolate more than anything in the world. His sweet tooth often gets him in trouble
with his parents, so much so that his mom makes him take tonic to make sure he
gets the proper nutrients that his diet lacks.
One day, John makes a trip to the candy store where he buys a large box
of fine chocolates. Before he goes to
bed, he unwraps the large box to find only one piece of chocolate. Although disappointed, he eats it and is
surprised it is one of the best chocolates he’s ever eaten. The next day John begins to brush his teeth
before eating breakfast when he notices that his toothpaste tastes like
chocolate. As the day continues,
everything John drinks or eats, even non-edible things such as a pencil, tastes
like chocolate. Of course, no one
believes that the things he touches turn to chocolate. John faces different types of conflict
throughout the story, such as person-against-person when he faces the school
bully, Spider and person-versus-self because he is a selfish boy. As this progressive plot continues, John
starts to realize he doesn’t always like the taste of chocolate. In fact, at the book’s climax, John’s mother
turns into a “…lifeless statue of chocolate.” (p. 112). He has to decide whether or not he will put
aside his selfish ways and choose between the chocolate touch or to restore his
mother back to life. You’ll have to read
the book to find out what happens during the resolution of the story’s plot.
The words I marked in
the book using this week’s “Mark My Words” strategy were: brigands (p. 10),
tonic (p. 32), derisively (p. 88), brimful (p. 106), chocolatitis (p. 109). Some of the words I marked were unfamiliar,
such as tonic, brigands, derisively, and brimful. I looked up the definition of these words so I
could better understand it in the context of the sentence. I thought the words chocolatitis was an
interesting word. John Midas’ doctor,
Dr. Cranium, used this word to diagnosis his disease of eating too much
chocolate. I liked using the “Mark My
Words” strategy because it encourages students to be active readers and ask
questions about unfamiliar words. I plan to use this strategy with my students’
in the future when they are reading chapter books.
Although The Chocolate Touch interests students
in 3rd through 5th grade, I used it with my class of 2nd
graders to teach numerous literary concepts. I waited until the spring to use the book because most of my students
were reading chapter books by this time.
I used the book to teach my 2nd graders how to summarize chapters
in a chapter book, build vocabulary and context clue skills, and strengthen
their dictionary skills. Each student
had a packet that consisted of a title, summary, illustration, and vocabulary
words page for each chapter. Because the
chapters did not have titles, I encouraged the students to create their own
title for the chapter after reading it.
As a class we discussed the main events that happened in the chapter,
and the students wrote a 3 to 5 sentence summary about the chapter. The students also illustrated their favorite
part in the chapter. To build students’
vocabulary, I had them use a “Guess and Check” vocabulary graphic
organizer. The students chose 5
vocabulary words, guessed the meaning of the word by reading the sentence that
contained it, and checked the word’s meaning by looking it up in the
dictionary.
Some BIG questions you could ask your
students are, “What would you do if everything turned to chocolate? What could happen if John became selfish
again?”.
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