Bon Appetit, Mr. Rabbit!
by Claude Boujon
A charming French picture book about a picky rabbit who learns to love carrots after a scary encounter
The story
Mr. Rabbit dislikes carrots and sets out to discover what his animal neighbors eat. After visiting a frog, bird, fish, pig, whale, and monkey — and rejecting every option — he encounters a fox whose preferred meal is rabbit. A hasty escape teaches him that carrots are worth appreciating after all.
Age verdict
Best for ages 3-5. Works as a read-aloud for ages 5-7 but too simple for independent reading beyond kindergarten.
Our take
Classroom-friendly picture book that entertains and engages young readers through humor and visual storytelling but offers limited growth depth. Kid and teacher scores are balanced; parent scores are notably lower due to minimal vocabulary, literary craft, and real-world content. Best suited for read-aloud, early literacy patterning, and food-themed classroom units.
What stands out
Each audience's top 3 dimensions. Out of 30 scored per book.
Kids love
- Ending satisfaction Solid
The circular return to carrots delivers earned transformation — the same object that opened the story (rejected carrots) closes it (celebrated carrot stew), with the fox encounter providing genuine consequence that makes the shift meaningful. Stronger than Lunch Lady (5, GRAPHIC) in thematic completeness, comparable to Gathering Blue (6, YA) in the protagonist making a morally complex choice to stay rather than leave. The final line provides ceremonial closure.
- Mental movie Solid
As a fully illustrated picture book with pastel drawings on every spread, the visual experience is vivid and varied — each animal neighbor creates a distinct scene, and the fox chase delivers visceral visual action. The illustrations create a clear, colorful mental movie that text alone could not achieve. Comparable to City Spies (6, MG) in functional visual scaffolding, though the illustrated format inherently delivers stronger imagery than prose-only books.
Parents love
- Reading gateway Solid
The picture book format with very short text, engaging premise, and consistent humor creates a low-barrier entry point for emergent readers aged 3-5. The repetitive structure supports decoding confidence. Accessible but lacking the multiple entry points of Frog and Toad Together (9, EARLY) or the irresistible premise of 5 Worlds (10, GRAPHIC). Gateway strength is primarily format-driven rather than book-specific.
- Re-read durability Solid
Young children naturally re-read picture books, and the humor, anticipatory structure, and satisfying ending support multiple readings without fatigue. Children enjoy performing the disgust reactions repeatedly. Comparable to Artemis Fowl (5, MG) in rewarding first re-reads with new details, though the picture book format inherently supports re-reading more than longer novels.
Teachers love
- Read-aloud power Strong
Dialogue-heavy text with natural rhythm, performable exclamations, and a repetitive question-and-response structure that invites child participation. The read-aloud quality is strong — children can chime in with anticipated disgust reactions and join the pattern. Stronger than The Golem's Eye (7, MG) in accessibility and participatory engagement, but not reaching Sylvester and the Magic Pebble (9, PICTURE) in elegant prose rhythm or Interrupting Chicken (10, PICTURE) in built-in performance mechanics.
- Classroom versatility Solid
Fits food and nutrition units, animal behavior studies, and social-emotional learning about preferences and fear. The repetitive structure serves pattern-recognition exercises for early literacy. Comparable to An Enchantment of Ravens (5) in working well for novel study and mentor text analysis. Multiple curriculum entry points but none with deep coverage.
✓ Perfect for
- • Picky eaters ages 3-5
- • Preschool read-alouds about food and animals
- • Pattern-story fans who love repetition and participation
- • French-English bilingual families
Not ideal for
Children older than 6-7 seeking chapter-length stories or complex plots, or parents looking for significant vocabulary or literary growth.
At a glance
- Pages
- 29
- Words
- 0k
- Difficulty
- Easy
- POV
- Third Person Omniscient
- Illustration
- Fully Illustrated
- Published
- 1987
- Illustrator
- Claude Boujon
Mood & style
You'll know it worked when…
Single sitting — under 5 minutes for a read-aloud.
If your kid loved "Bon Appetit, Mr. Rabbit!"
Matched across 30 dimensions — interest hooks, character appeal, tone, pacing, emotional core. Not by what other people bought. By what fits the same reader profile.
Curious George Takes a Job
by H.A. Rey
Same genre (animal fiction). Same pacing (steady clip)
Brown Bear, Brown Bear, What Do You See?
by Bill Martin Jr.
Same genre (animal fiction). Both playful in tone
If You Give a Moose a Muffin
by Laura Joffe Numeroff
animal fiction as secondary genre. Both playful in tone
Pete the Cat: I Love My White Shoes
by Eric Litwin
Same genre (animal fiction). Both playful in tone
Curious George Rides a Bike
by H.A. Rey
Same genre (animal fiction). Same emotional weight (light)
Curious George and the Puppies
by H.A. Rey & Margret Rey
Same genre (animal fiction). Same pacing (steady clip)
Want more picks like this?
Get 5 hand-picked book reviews for your child's age — one email a month.