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Alberto Salas Plays Paka Paka con la Papa

Join the Quest with Peru's Famed Scientist and Potato Expert

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

What can a potato do? To Peruvian scientist Alberto Salas, they have the power to change the world. Go on the hunt with Alberto for for wild potatoes before they go extinct in this playful picture book biography, gorgeously illustrated by Caldecott-honoree Juana Martinez-Neal.
High up in the Andes mountains of Peru, agricultural scientist Alberto Salas is on a quest. A quest... for potatoes.
Up and down the Andes mountains he goes, playing an epic game of paka paka con la papa, potato hide and seek. These potatoes are special: they have the power to feed the world.
Alberto doesn't have a second to waste. The climate is changing and Alberto must find each and every one to save them before they go extinct.
The game is on!
Alberto races and peers and prods. Drives and trods and climbs. Will he find the potato he seeks? Will he win the game of paka paka con la papa?
Author Sara Andrea Fajardo's spirited biography about "the godfather of potatoes" is paired with lush art by Caldecott-honoree Juana Martinez-Neal to capture how celebrated scientist Alberto Salas brings joy, curiosity, and fun to his very important, life-changing work.

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    • Kirkus

      Starred review from January 15, 2025
      A potato hunter's game of hide-and-seek nourishes the world in this quirky biographic tribute. Alberto Salas is on a mission: to discover and document all the potatoes he can "before they're lost for good." The renowned Peruvian agronomist--affectionately portrayed as a rosy-cheeked, wiry-haired, squat man clad in a yellow coat--plays the game of potato paka paka (or hide-and-seek), scouring the Andes to support the development and proliferation of potatoes across the world. Each day the growing effects of climate change make his endeavor more urgent. Blending an affable, often playful tone and a loose yet incredibly informative narrative peppered with words in Spanish and Quechua, Fajardo recounts the potato expert's adventures in all their glory, putting the story into a broader context that makes clear the global issue of widespread hunger. The author homes in on Salas' precise methods and unorthodox solutions, including homemade maps and newspaper pouches to transport plants. Working in paper collage, Martinez-Neal favors dabs of rich colors among broad landscapes of earthy browns and lots of potatoes of different shapes and sizes to bring Salas' potato exploits to life, including his collaboration with Indigenous communities. A robust glossary and backmatter delving further into Salas' work and the diversity of potatoes round out a sublime portrait. Publishes simultaneously in Spanish. A remarkable path to starch-dom. (author's and illustrator's notes)(Picture-book biography. 4-8)

      COPYRIGHT(2025) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • School Library Journal

      Starred review from January 31, 2025

      Gr 2-5-With keen eyes, Alberto Salas searches the Andean landscape, collecting and cataloging varieties of potato. Fajardo's picture book biography capably foregrounds the science of plant collection and identification, specifically within the context of the planet's changing landscape and climate. In both editions, the titular phrase appears alongside additional Quechuan vocabulary, honoring the Indigenous inhabitants of Peru, while accenting the lyrical text with bursts of rhythm ideal for reading aloud: "Qacha, Qacha," "Kallpa, Kallpa." Martinez-Neal's distinctive style is textured by a variety of mediums, including paper collage, pastels, and acrylics, among others. The earth tones are enlivened by the depiction of Salas in yellow attire, a metaphorical beam of light spotlighting the humble papa. Perspective shifts capture peeks of the Peruvian landscape, while close ups allow for a peek at Salas's handiwork using a pickaxe to loosen soil or delicately pressing plant samples onto paper. The English edition includes Spanish throughout, and extensive back matter further illuminates Salas's work, the importance of plant diversity, and notes from the author and illustrator about their connection to the text. VERDICT Thematic connections to environmentalism and sustainability in our changing modern world, told through a Latinx lens, this is a highly recommended title for all nonfiction collections.-Jessica Agudelo

      Copyright 2025 School Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

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