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Yasmina #0

Chef Yasmina and the Potato Panic

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In this silly, action-packed graphic novel from Wauter Mannaert, Chef Yasmina and the Potato Panic, a young chef is the only one who can protect her town from an onslaught of scientifically enhanced, highly addictive potatoes.

Yasmina isn't like the other kids in her city. Maybe it's the big chef hat she wears. Or the fact that she stuffs her dad's lunchbox full of spring rolls instead of peanut butter and jelly. She might be an oddball, but no one can deny that Yasmina has a flair for food. All she needs to whip up a gourmet meal is a recipe from her cookbook and fresh vegetables from the community garden.

But everything changes when the garden is bulldozed and replaced with a strange new crop of potatoes. Her neighbors can't get enough of these spuds! And after just one bite their behavior changes--they slobber, chase cats, and howl at the moon. What's the secret ingredient in these potatoes that has everyone acting like a bunch of crazed canines? Yasmina needs to find a cure, and fast!

160 pages, Paperback

First published January 26, 2021

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Wauter Mannaert

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5 stars
103 (15%)
4 stars
265 (39%)
3 stars
234 (35%)
2 stars
54 (8%)
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8 (1%)
Displaying 1 - 30 of 127 reviews
Profile Image for Melina Souza.
357 reviews1,909 followers
February 23, 2021
3.5

Peguei pra ler durante a live de sprints de leitura hoje e adorei.
Gostei muito de saber qual foi a inspiração do autor para escrever essa graphic novel (tem essa informação logo depois que a história acaba) ♡

Depois falo mais sobre ele porque agora estou com fome hehe :x
6,484 reviews71 followers
February 18, 2019
I really love this story. It has everything that I like in it. Yasmina is a very likeable character, the drawing style is good enough and it has a very strong, this is the best part in my opinion, message in it. The message is some sort of environmentalist and good eating/health habits, values that are both really important for me and the author bring this subject with humor and a perfect mixed of lightness and seriousness it doesn't become heavy and don't fall into absurdity either. This book also bring some social criticism which I really like! It's just a fun comic that have deep thinking and message to pass.Really well done!
Profile Image for Eva.
255 reviews65 followers
March 26, 2019
Somebody is tampering with the potato. Tasty and healthy food? Forget it. The healthy eater who enjoys his meal is in danger. But luckily there's Yasmina. She is a young cook who loves fresh ingrediënts and makes the most wonderful vegetarian dishes for her father, who works in a snackbar. They are poor and have no money for healthy food. Fast food is far cheaper, but Yasmina refsuses to eat it. Her friends, two vegetable gardeners, provide her with what she needs. Until, one day, that is no longer possible. Yasmina starts researching and finds out what's going on. Is she in time to safe everyone?

This graphic novel is about healthy eating and taking good care of your environment. It brings an ecological message, aimed at younger readers. A graphic novel for young readers is very rare still in the Netherland. Or in this case Belgium, since Mannaert is a Belgian artist.

Wauter Mannaert has an extraordinary style. No clear lines for him, against the trend. He draws sketchy detailed pictures and lovely detailed characters. HIs drawings tell the story almost on their own. There's not a lot of spoken word in it.

The story is obviously aimed at younger readers. Maybe 9 or 10? It reads easily and the characters are solid and likeable. Even though the story is touching a some point, it never becomes preachy. Near the end it seems to derail a bit into a fantastic superhero like story. That's the only part not very interesting for an adult. Still, i forgive him. The rest of this book is just too delightful. And finally, another graphic novel in Dutch my kids can read. Thank you Dargaud!
Profile Image for Melki.
6,418 reviews2,449 followers
March 8, 2021
I really enjoyed this graphic novel about a young girl who loves cooking vegetable dishes for her father, and how she becomes embroiled in a sinister plot to get consumers addicted to junk food. Some may find the book a bit preachy about veganism and non-GMO foods, AND conservatives and capitalists are sure to HATE it, but on the whole I think it offers some good lessons about healthy eating, and a whole lotta fun to boot!

Fine artwork, as well.

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Profile Image for Dustyloup.
1,106 reviews6 followers
April 12, 2020
Absolutely charming! It's like the Tom-Tom & Nana series (Tom-Tom et l'impossible Nana) but with a social message about human behavior, our relationship with food and with our neighbors near and far, as well as a deeper message about the future of food.
This comic/BD touches on different perspectives on food cultures - cuisine vs. fast food, "traditional" agriculture vs. permaculture, and plant hybrids vs. GMO's without necessarily passing judgment except on GMO's and even then, it's all in how you read it. I really appreciated the two "potager" neighbors who each had their own way of gardening and still got along.
It's a bit difficult to place the age range for this because the message is interesting to adults, but many might find the style too childish to take seriously. The style is would be appealing to kids, the message is perhaps over their heads, but you can look at it like just a good guys/bad guys story.
Could be used for Book Riot's Read Harder 2020 challenge to read a food book about a cuisine you've never tried before.
I really loved it and would recommend :)
Profile Image for Cherlynn | cherreading.
1,763 reviews980 followers
March 21, 2022
I was just thinking what a silly story this is and then realised it's stated right there in the synopsis 😂 (I go into most books blind).

I like the idea behind the story and its overall message, but didn't care for it. Even though I got the main gist of things, some scenes were hard to follow and I had no idea what was going on. Not sure what's with the random whiffs. The text is lacking (both literally and figuratively).

I didn't like Yasmina at all but the artwork is good and the fork in her chef's hat was a nice touch.

Meh, thank you, next.
206 reviews22 followers
February 27, 2019
Malgré son jeune âge, Yasmina est déjà une cheffe émérite, qui réussit à préparer de savoureux petits plats à partir des légumes donnés par ses deux amis jardiniers Cyrille et Marco. Mais le jour où un méchant fabricant de patates en sachet rase les potagers pour y installer son usine, la fillette se retrouve bien embêtée. Ce n'est pas avec le maigre salaire d'Omran, son papa employé dans un fast-food, qu'elle va réussir à acheter des tomates à près de 3€ le kilo. Heureusement, elle arrive à se servir en douce dans le jardin qu'une mystérieuse voisine cultive sur le toit de son immeuble. Puis les patates en sachet envahissent les magasins, connaissant un succès fou, et les gens qui en ont mangé se mettent à se comporter très bizarrement...

On aura compris depuis longtemps que je suis incapable de résister à une bédé culinaire. Mais outre son thème alléchant, "Yasmina et les mangeurs de patates" coche pratiquement toutes les cases de ce que j'adore en bande dessinée. Sur le plan graphique: absence de cases, longues plages muettes et néanmoins très parlantes, bâtiments vus en coupe et architecture originale, gros plans d'assiette, belles illustrations pleine page... Sur le plan de la narration, une jeune héroïne racisée, futée et militante du bien-manger, des personnages secondaires divers et attachants malgré leurs petits travers, des échanges hyper drôles (notamment entre le jardinier tradi et le fou du bio, ou entre Omran et ses collègues qui, voyant ses bento végétariens, soupirent qu'eux, sans viande et sans frites, ils ont de nouveau faim à 16h). Même si j'ai davantage aimé le côté "tranche de vie" de la longue mise en place que l'aventure qui s'emballe dans le dernier tiers, le récit est original et maîtrisé, sans aucun temps mort. Et malgré son côté parfois farfelu, il fait passer de très chouettes idées. Mon avis: il vous le faut. Tout de suite.

Mon blog lecture: https://l4nn3x3.blogspot.com/
Profile Image for Andrew.
2,094 reviews59 followers
July 24, 2021
Yasmina is a tween chef who makes her dishes for her dad's lunch from her neighbors' vegetable gardens. However, a cruel investor brings a sudden change, destroying the neighbors' garden. A new potato chip craze suddenly has everyone acting like dogs. What can Chef Yasmina do?

Full of very silly illustrations and even sillier plot twists and character asides, this is a good read for those who enjoy the Big Nate series. The text is minimal, but the artwork captures the emotions. The recipes that Yasmina creates are enough to make anyone, including everyone in Yasmina's apartment building, would be enraptured to eat.

Profile Image for Sara.
1,036 reviews25 followers
December 28, 2020
Read more graphic novel reviews at www.graphiclibrary.org.

Yasmina is an aspiring young chef who fills her dad’s lunchbox with delicious and fresh foods. He works at a French fry eatery, but she insists on fresh ingredients that she often obtains from a neighborhood garden. That is, until a big conglomerate comes in, buys the land, and razes the gardens to plant potato fields. Yasmina resorts to stealing veggies and herbs from a neighbor’s garden on the roof of her building, but she’s eventually caught and made to stop. She tries to spend her meager savings on some fresh foods from the market, but she instead finds all the fresh ingredients have been replaced by potato crisps in bags, and her fellow townspeople are going nuts for them! Yasmina and her friends from the garden must get to the bottom of the mystery of these potato crisps and why they’re turning the townspeople into crazy animals, and her upstairs neighbor may have something to do with it all.

Yasmina is so full of energy, and reading this made me hungry for some fresh foods. She is very passionate about food and her family, and she expresses her love for her father in being able to cook for him. There is a bit of a criticism to cultures prioritizing convenience food rather than homemade with fresh ingredients, as well as the harm being done to the environment by large corporate farming. The "mystery" Yasmina must solve is fun and slightly gross. Most of the characters around Yasmina, including her dad, are not given a ton of depth or development. Still, this is an imaginative story with some interesting social commentary.

The art is a little interesting. There are whole pages without dialogue, but the story is easy to follow. There are no panel outlines like traditional graphic novels. Make sure readers have a firm grasp on narrating wordless pages and following the flow without panels.

Sara's Rating: 7/10
Suitability Level: Grades 6-8

This review was made possible with an advanced reader copy from the publisher through Net Galley. This graphic novel will be on sale January 26, 2021.
Profile Image for Laura.
2,878 reviews81 followers
November 17, 2020
This book has been published in English before, but in two volumes. Together, as one volume, the story seems to drag a little in the middle, that I didn't notice when reading it separated by a few months.

This is the evil altered potatoes that people are eating, and starting to act funny, and Yasmina, who always prepares the food for her father, and doesn't eat fast food, doesn't notice until the community garden that she gets her veggies from is taken away from her.

A nice enough story. Really wonderful bad guys, but, as I said, it sags a bit in the middle. Good middle grade story, though. Strong heroine.

Thanks to Netgalley for making this book available for an honest review.
Profile Image for Katie Lawrence.
1,635 reviews35 followers
March 23, 2021
This was a very silly graphic novel with food at it's heart. I love that there are more translated children's graphic novels making their way to the US. The addictive potatoes, why they're addictive and the side effects are really interesting. I enjoyed the two backyard farmers and their debate over organic versus pesticides etc. The rooftop garden was visually stunning as was the farmer/scientist who cultivated it. Yasmina and her father have a really great bond, I loved that she made him special lunches and helped out so much. So fun and unique!
102 reviews
April 3, 2021
Um this book is AMAZING. I did not realize how badly I needed gorgeous illustrations of delicious food. There are super sweet characters, the dad and daughter have a super sweet relationship, and the neighbors all have amazing gardens. The story is fast and sweet, and the illustrations are fluid and rhythmic.

My only gripe is Somewhere I saw an alternative cover for this book and it is WAY better. Regardless this book is amazing.
Profile Image for Aylin Kuhls.
300 reviews
July 11, 2023
Auch wenn die Geschichte etwas zu einfach und vorhersehbar gestrickt ist (für jüngere Leser aber wahrscheinlich doch überraschend), ist dies eine sehr unterhaltsame, dynamische Geschichte über die Liebe zum Kochen und genmanipuliertes Essen.

Eine schöne Idee, die mir zum Ende hin, aber doch etwas zu abgefahren und chaotisch und in typischen gut und böse Klischees erzählt wird.
Profile Image for Richard.
779 reviews13 followers
April 20, 2021
An okay story occasionally elevated by some very cool art! It also leaves you very hungry for french fries and the food illustration in general makes everything seem very appetizing.
Profile Image for Chezsa.
524 reviews
November 24, 2021
This was very fun and I'm adding becoming a Top Chef (of my home) and making cute lunchboxes for my loved ones and also drawing a comic to my New Year's Resolutions now 😊
Profile Image for Tanya.
435 reviews16 followers
June 26, 2021
Charming story and kids will enjoy it.
Profile Image for Emily.
2,227 reviews
March 4, 2021
I loved the art and use of color. The story was exciting and will prompt kids to think about what kind of food they are eating.
Profile Image for Becky B.
8,179 reviews125 followers
January 26, 2021
Yasmina loves to cook and prepare fresh veggies for her father and herself in creative ways. She relies heavily on the local community garden for her creations. When a big company growing dubious potatoes destroys the garden and starts cranking out products that have people acting VERY strangely, Chef Yasmina is on the case of how to reverse what they’ve done and take down the company.

I’m totally fine with some imaginative scifi about what crazy scientists can do with wacky machines. As a former biology teacher, I think it is sad how people get psyched out about genetically modified foods purely because they don’t understand the science. I hope kids will view this as pure fictional entertainment and do some careful study of how recombinant DNA science really works (I’ll give you a sneak preview…you cannot incorporate the DNA of what you eat into your own DNA…unless you are feasting on viruses instead of normal dietary choices).

Notes on content: No language issues. No sexual content. One person is turned into vegetable. People act like animals, including some biting. Yasmina is not above stealing veggies when she can’t get them from other places and doesn’t seem very sorry about doing so.

I received an ARC of this title from Harvest House through NetGalley in exchange for an honest review.
Profile Image for Flossmoor Public Library (IL).
641 reviews15 followers
September 30, 2021
4 stars

Yasmina might be the cutest chef I have ever seen. She wears a chef's hat 24/7, has an infectiously optimistic and determined energy, and gets her supplies to make her gourmet creations from her (bickering) neighbors' vegetable gardens. The beginning scenes of her sending her dad off with her vegetarian delicacies are heartwarming. He lets the subtle comments from his co-workers roll off his back and comes home reeking of the fast food joint that he works at eager for more of Yasmina’s creations. When Yasmina’s neighbors have their gardens bulldozed by a mysterious corporation, she scrambles to find vegetables, but the rooftop garden is off-limits and she can’t or won’t ask for the money to go to the grocery store. When everyone starts eating the food coming from the aforementioned mysterious corporation, everything sort of goes haywire from there. Fresh food quickly becomes obsolete, while people's addiction to this strange new processed food drives them to disturbing behaviors. Yasmina and her friends eventually team up to solve the crisis and, all in all, this ends up being a cute one. The dialogue is kept to a minimum and the drawings are small detailed pictures with soft edges that float on the page instead of being locked into traditional comic panels.
The problems I had with this book were minor. I thought Yasmina’s struggle to afford and to even find fresh produce was poignant and could have been elaborated on more: something about the lack of accessibility of fresh food to those that are of low income status, or how industrial farming and bioengineering can have positive and negative effects, but that never happens. Instead, it’s more a two-dimensional lesson that chemically-altered food is inherently wrong or unhealthy. I will say that this is a good starting point for those larger conversations and is easily digestible content for middle grade readers searching for a fun new adventure that's low on the stakes and high on the comedy.

~ Miss Krystal
Profile Image for Emily.
194 reviews12 followers
August 15, 2021
LOVED this book. The themes were really interesting (healthy vs unhealthy food, scientifically altered food vs organic food, food made with love & time vs food of convenience). Although these themes sound like they'd be boring to kids, Mannaert manages to wrap them up in humor and a crazy plot that (I think, anyway) keep the story entertaining for younger readers. It's a really clever book that manages to be fun while also opening doors to important conversations that don't often/easily come up in juvenile books. I think it will appeal to both children and adults. Disclaimer to all that - I'm a 26 year old and I have not asked any children what they think of this book.

My only complaint was that the ending for the villain didn't seem fully developed.

The illustrations are just lovely. The color palette is bright enough to be fun and exciting yet refined enough to keep it from going distracting or over the top cutesy. The line work is delicate and there are lots of little details. Sometimes there is text, and sometimes the illustrations carry the story. It can feel almost meditative to pore over the artwork and appreciate how the plot and world can be so richly enhanced with thoughtfully crafted images.

And finally, I really appreciated the creator's notes in the back! The whole book I was trying to figure out which country it was set in, but I didn't know enough about Belgium to guess correctly. So it was fun to learn more about Belgium - as well as french fries, the inspiration behind the story, and Mannaert's creative process.

Highly recommend!!
Profile Image for Erica.
1,154 reviews29 followers
August 19, 2021
This Belgian graphic novel features a Middle-Eastern kid (in Belgium) living with her dad who works at a french-fry shop. She loves to cook fresh vegetables, which she buys, borrows, or steals from her neighborhood - the local shops if she has money, two quarreling gardeners - one who uses pesticides & one who is au naturel - who have permission to plant in a city-owned lot (and both love to share with her), and a woman in her building who has a prolific roof garden (who doesn't know Yasmina is stealing her veggies).

They all get caught up in a nefarious plot to use genetic engineering to make potato chips that cause people who eat them to be addicted, with all the characteristics of dogs; insatiable hunger, loyalty (to the product!), impatience, and sniffing, barking, & scratching.

Yasmina shows creativity, loving-kindness, & ingenuity, and she unites people who might otherwise be suspicious of one another.

The drawings are dynamic & full of humorous & intelligent details - yet are clear & easy to follow. The bad guy (Tom de Perre - a play on the French word for potato; pomme de terre) looks like your typical overfed, money-grubbing capitalist, and the exploited scientist who inadvertently handed him his tool is a nerdy botanist-researcher named Amaryllis. Yasmina's father's facial expressions convey as much or more than words could - and he doesn't speak much...which is a clever way to show that he may be an immigrant.

The drawings are fun & lively. I think kids ages 8 to 14 will enjoy this, whether they are interested in cooking or in fighting evil.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
135 reviews
January 31, 2021
Chef Yasmina and the Potato Panic, by Wauter Mannaert, is one of a flurry of recent graphic novels about kids who love to cook. Yasmina whips up gourmet meals for herself and her widowed father from vegetables supplied by two friends. When a stranger comes to town and bulldozes the friends’ vegetable gardens to set up a factory farm, Yasmina is reduced to stealing produce from the mysterious woman who has a whole farm on the roof of their building. Meanwhile the factory farm is pumping out potato snacks that are not only addictive but cause the people who eat them to act like dogs. Yasmina and her gardener friends unravel the mystery and (spoiler alert!) turn the evil factory owner into a potato. Mannaert, who is Dutch, is also the artist for the graphic novel Weegee: Serial Photographer. Yasmina is totally different but it carries over Mannaert’s sly humor and eye for detail, and there is some spectacular cartooning here, with cutaway views of Yasmina’s apartment building, panoramic urban scenes filled with diverse people and neighborhoods, and of course, the teeming gardens tended by three quirky gardeners. There’s also a great section in the end where Mannaert talks about the development of the book. It’s intended for kids aged 8-12 but there’s plenty here for an adult to appreciate.
3,035 reviews12 followers
June 29, 2021
I almost gave it a fourth star, but at the end I realized that there was no real payoff for some of the plot threads...including the fact that the neighbors are so entranced by the smells of Yasmina's cooking. Her culinary artistry with veggies is apparent, though. The thing is, for much of the story she's a bit of a vegetable thief. Her father probably doesn't make much money, as he apparently works in the fast food business, and she seems to supplement their food budget by stealing vegetables from the garden of a neighbor. Two of the family's adult friends grow their own vegetables on land that is owned by the city, but which has been granted to them to use. How and why this urban farm land becomes a seemingly giant industrial potato farm eluded me, not because of the way the land was transferred, but instead by the way the little bit of land turned into something enormous.
Anyway, the story is about food and its genetic manipulation of an SF/horror movie type, only with potatoes as part of the monstrous result. Mad science, brilliant cooking, and extreme vegetable gardening all intertwine in this weird story.
The lettering was not changed from the European edition, so the money is all in Euros, which may confuse some younger readers.
7,978 reviews39 followers
December 3, 2020
I received an electronic ARC from First Second Books through NetGalley.
Humorous with dark undertones that challenge readers to think about what they eat on one plane, and who/what they believe and follow on a deeper one. Yasmina loves to cook and work hard to cook healthy meals for her dad. Hints of past grief and current financial struggles are easy to pick up from the artwork. Sadly, to cook her vegetarian (by necessity) meals, she has to steal from a neighbor's rooftop garden to supplement what she gets from others she knows. When her friends' gardens are plowed under to build a huge factory farm, the real changes begin. They notice that people who eat the new chips have definite changes in personality. They follow blindly and move in packs. In fact, they appear to show dog-like characteristics. Together with her two friends and neighbor, they solve the mystery, defeat the owner, and develop a solution to change people back.
The underlying themes are woven throughout and tied in by both the text and illustrations. The artwork offers further hints and background so readers can flesh out the full story.
Looking forward to reading more in this series.
Profile Image for Ariana.
74 reviews
November 3, 2021
I absolutely loved this graphic novel. I may be slightly biased by the fact that the main character is a vegetable-loving chef and budding scientist. I think the book did a great job of discussing the complex and emotion-fraught issues concerning food in today's world. Characters include a scientist trying to eliminate poverty through her invention, but thwarted by greedy big business, and 2 small farm owners-- one a caricature of the natural/organic world, and one a synthetic pesticide user. It does a great job of showing that there are good people trying to accomplish laudable goals on all sides of the debate, and the way to make progress in creating better diets for ourselves and reducing poverty in the world is to more deeply understand each other and the principles and science involved, not to fight with each other

There's a great father-daughter relationship, clever cartooning to show ideas, relationships and characters' perceptions, fun characters, a silly and somewhat ridiculous plot, and some great misconceptions and problem solving that all lead to this being a really enjoyable and worthwhile book. I would definitely recommend it.
Displaying 1 - 30 of 127 reviews

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