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One Watermelon Seed

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On the Toronto Public Library's 10 best books of 2008 list for Children up to 5 years of age On Resource Link's "Best of 2008" List Canadian Children's Book Centre Our Choice, 2009 First published in 1986 and a staple ever since for parents of preschool children and teachers of primary grades, "One Watermelon Seed" is presented in a new edition with a bold new cover and interior art.
In this deceptively simple counting book, Max and Josephine tend their garden while readers follow along, counting from one to ten as the garden is planted. Then readers can count in groups of tens as the garden is harvested, while they search through the pictures for the many small animals that are hiding throughout. A concise and clever text introduces color and rhythm, and the illustrations are bright and engaging, making this a perfect counting book for children aged four to seven.
 

29 pages, Hardcover

First published January 1, 1986

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About the author

Celia Barker Lottridge

28 books8 followers

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5 stars
24 (24%)
4 stars
29 (29%)
3 stars
37 (37%)
2 stars
9 (9%)
1 star
0 (0%)
Displaying 1 - 19 of 19 reviews
Profile Image for Janet.
3,699 reviews37 followers
August 15, 2022
This is a counting book and the learning occurs by planting seeds in a vegetable garden and then counting the number of harvested vegetables from the plants. The planted seeds are counted from 1 to 10 and the harvested vegetables and fruits are counted by tens from 10 to 100. Illustrations are bright and colorful. However my two star rating relates to the poor garden techniques illustrated, for example the corn, planting ten corn seeds will not yield 100 ears of corn. Planting ten corn seeds in one long row will not allow for enough pollination to produce kernels on the ear. And also corn plants will never produce ten ears to a stalk, three to four would be the maximum if the corn seed was in an arrangement for maximum pollination.
Authors, illustrators, and editors need to check real facts when using concrete examples to illustrate picture books. And by the way one watermelon seed will not produce ten watermelons and two pumpkin seeds will not produce twenty pumpkins. By the way growing up on a produce farm allowed me to watch all these concepts on a number of acres.
Perhaps I should have given this a one star.
Profile Image for Becky B.
9,360 reviews185 followers
August 12, 2025
Max and Josephine plant a garden with a couple seeds of different varieties. From those few seeds, they harvest a whole lot of fruits and vegetables by the tens.

This book can help kids count by tens, notice how one seed can grow and produce many fruits/vegetables, and study the vivid words used to describe all the produce. There’s also a prompt to find certain creatures in the garden at the back of the book, turning it into a hide-n-seek puzzle.
Profile Image for Flossmoor Public Library (IL).
641 reviews17 followers
August 4, 2017
We read this book in our Tuesday Tales storytime for three- to five-year-olds. This book is a counting book, but the kids at our storytime didn't participate in the counting as much as we thought. However, the illustrations were cute and the kids enjoyed the end of the book when they had to identify the food in the garden and the animals on the page.

Miss Jenny
Profile Image for Miss Pippi the Librarian.
2,752 reviews60 followers
June 24, 2025
A counting and gardening book that features the planting of seeds and an abundance harvest. The seeds are planted 1-10. The crops are harvested in tens from 10-100. The books jumps to the Winter and the young growers enjoy popcorn from their harvest.

2025 storytime theme: watermelons

Reviewed from a library copy.
Profile Image for Karen.
50 reviews10 followers
July 28, 2021
Beautiful illustrations. Seems appropriate for kindergarten to first grade children who still practice counting, first from one to ten, then counting by tens.
Profile Image for SallySnowtiger.
40 reviews
November 12, 2009
One Watermelon Seed

Grades (pre-K)and K-1
Non-fiction Math


Karen Patkau’s illustrations have a realistic, but cartoon like quality. The colors are bold and vivid with illustrations spanning over two pages. The first illustration introduces the reader to Max and Josephine, who planted a garden, and as the book progresses we see more detail given to the various plants in the garden. Starting from soil and seeds, the small beginnings of little green shrubs explode with color into a full garden. The text is minimal at the bottom of each page building up a counting process starting with “one watermelon seed” to “10 corn seeds.” The illustrations grow larger with the increase in number and the growth of the garden. Once the garden is full, Max and Josephine realize they have plenty to pick. Counting in 10s leading to 100, they start with “10 watermelons big and green” to “100 ears of corn,” which Max and Josephine save to make “100s and 1000s of big white crunchy puffs of popcorn.”
The text not only teaches counting from 1-10, but counting in 10s leading to 100. It teaches children where fruits and vegetables come from, but also teaches them color and size by building vocabulary in providing short descriptions of various colors and textures used to describe fruits and vegetables. “Thirty eggplants, dark and purple, and forty peppers, shiny yellow” accompany bright colorful illustrations and the numbers at the bottom of page also match the color of the fruit or vegetable to reinforce colors and numbers. Patkau also includes two pages in the end of the book illustrating the various colorful fruits and vegetables that were planted such as watermelons, pumpkins, eggplants and strawberries. The final page titled “Can you find any of these creatures in the garden?” illustrates various insects and birds seen throughout the book such the bee, ladybug, Robin and hummingbird. Children will enjoy this book because it's easy to read format and bright colorful illustrations will make learning to count fun.

Grades K-1
Math/Science
This is a great book to include in math and science lessons for children in pre-k to 1st grade. It teaches counting 1-10 and counting in 10s. There is a lot of material in this book that can be used to introduce science lessons on plant growth, insects and birds.
Profile Image for Vicki.
4,962 reviews32 followers
May 11, 2012
What a great book to read to a group or one on one! This book has beautiful illustrations full of critters and bugs and plants and seeds! Watch as Max and his sister plant their garden. Look for that black cat in each picture. Use this book for Pre-School Story Time/Class and the children enjoyed it so much they kept interrupting with how they like blueberries and such-that's a mark of a great book when the children interact with the reader.
19 reviews
July 19, 2012
This book does a good job of transitioning from counting 1 through 10 by 1's to 10 through 100 by 10's. I would use this book to work with very young students that are just learning how to count. The illustrations are great and help with the students counting. I could bring in different seeds for them to count on their table while I was reading the book to them. They could also sort the different seeds.
Profile Image for Christy.
113 reviews1 follower
March 9, 2010
This book has great illustrations and uses repeated text for beginning readers. Throughout the book the Max and Josephine plant and count all the way to ten. Great book for kindergarten and those learning to count using 10's, up to 100 ,and 100 to 1000.
Profile Image for Allison Burke.
108 reviews2 followers
Read
April 7, 2013
This is a fun book for young readers to be engaged in. The book teaches about counting items in a garden. The last page of the book provides several words of items in the illustrations in which the reader can go back and search. I would use this book for counting and adding.
Profile Image for Rosa.
1,831 reviews15 followers
January 6, 2014
This is a fun counting concept picture book. Kids can count the seeds as their planted and the fruit as its picked. I think it will work well as a read aloud.
Displaying 1 - 19 of 19 reviews

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