???? Kids Book Read Aloud: ENEMY PIE by Derek Munson and Tara Calahan King

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In the story “Enemy Pie” by Derek Munson, a boy learns that his perceived enemy, Jeremy, may not be so bad after all. With the help of his dad’s clever idea of spending time together, the boy discovers the importance of kindness and friendship, ultimately realizing that the secret to “enemy pie” is about building connections rather than harboring animosity. By the end of the summer, he transforms his enemy into a new friend, highlighting the power of understanding and companionship.
  1. What did the boy learn about his enemy, Jeremy, after spending time with him?
  2. How did the boy’s dad help him understand how to deal with enemies?
  3. Why do you think being kind to someone can change how you feel about them?

???? Kids Book Read Aloud: ENEMY PIE by Derek Munson and Tara Calahan King

Welcome, Reading Friends!

Hello, reading friends! It’s Ani. Have you ever met someone who wasn’t very nice to you and left you out of fun activities? In today’s story, we meet a boy who thought his new neighbor was his enemy. But his dad had a clever way to deal with enemies. Let’s find out what it was as we read “Enemy Pie.” If you have the book, grab it and read along with me!

The Perfect Summer?

It was supposed to be the best summer ever. The boy’s dad helped him build a treehouse, his sister was away at camp, and he was on the best baseball team. But then Jeremy Ross moved in next door to his best friend, Stanley. Jeremy laughed at him during a baseball game and didn’t invite him to a trampoline party. Jeremy was the only person on the boy’s enemy list, which he hung in his treehouse.

Dad’s Secret Recipe

The boy’s dad understood enemies. He said he had a way to get rid of them and showed the boy an old recipe book with a secret recipe for “Enemy Pie.” The boy wondered what was in the pie. Was it magic? Dad said it was the fastest way to get rid of enemies.

Making the Pie

The boy imagined putting yucky things in the pie, like weeds and worms, but Dad didn’t need those. While Dad cooked, the boy played outside, thinking about how terrible the pie must be. But then he smelled something delicious coming from the kitchen. Dad explained that if the pie smelled bad, the enemy wouldn’t eat it.

The Plan

Dad told the boy that for the pie to work, he had to spend a day with his enemy and be nice to him. It sounded hard, but the boy agreed to try. He went to Jeremy’s house and asked if he could play. They rode bikes, played on the trampoline, and had lunch together. The boy started having fun with Jeremy and realized he wasn’t such a bad guy.

Friendship Blooms

Jeremy liked the boy’s basketball hoop and taught him how to throw a boomerang. They played games in the treehouse, and the boy took down the enemy list. They had so much fun that the boy started to think maybe they didn’t need enemy pie after all.

The Surprise

After dinner, Dad served the pie with ice cream. The boy panicked, thinking Jeremy shouldn’t eat it. But Dad and Jeremy were enjoying the pie, and nothing bad happened. The boy tried it and found out it was delicious!

A New Friend

Jeremy invited the boy to play again the next day. The boy realized he had lost his best enemy and gained a new friend. Spending time with Jeremy showed him they had a lot in common.

The Secret of Enemy Pie

Did you figure out the secret to enemy pie? It’s not about the pie itself but about spending time and being kind to others. I hope you enjoyed our story today. Thank you for being my reading friend. See you next time! Subscribe for more story time, and don’t forget to click the bell so you’ll know each time a new video is posted.

  • Have you ever thought someone was your enemy but later found out they could be a friend? What changed your mind about them?
  • If you could make a special pie to help make friends, what ingredients would you put in it? Why do you think those ingredients would help?
  • Can you think of a time when you did something nice for someone else and it made you both feel happy? What did you do, and how did it make you feel?
  1. Recipe for Friendship: Just like the boy’s dad had a secret recipe for “Enemy Pie,” let’s create our own “Recipe for Friendship.” Think about what makes a good friend. Is it kindness, sharing, or playing together? Write down your ingredients for a perfect friendship on a piece of paper. You can even draw pictures of your ingredients. Share your recipe with a family member or friend and see what they would add!

  2. Friendly Adventure: Plan a “Friendly Adventure” day with someone you want to know better. It could be a classmate or a neighbor. Choose a fun activity like riding bikes, playing a game, or drawing together. After your adventure, talk about what you enjoyed and what you learned about each other. Did you discover something new about your friend?

  3. Observation Challenge: Over the next week, observe how people around you show kindness. It could be a smile, helping someone, or saying thank you. Keep a kindness journal and write down what you see. At the end of the week, share your observations with your class or family. How does kindness change the way people feel and act?

Sure! Here’s a sanitized version of the transcript:

Hello, reading friends! It’s Ani. Do you know anyone who isn’t always very nice to you and sometimes leaves you out of fun things? Well, in today’s story, we’re going to meet a little boy who had a new neighbor he thought was his enemy. But his dad had a surefire way of getting rid of enemies. Let’s find out what it was as we read “Enemy Pie.” If you have a copy, go get it so you can read along with me.

[Music]

“Enemy Pie,” written by Derek Munson and illustrated by Tara Callahan King.

It should have been a perfect summer. My dad helped me build a treehouse in our backyard. My sister was at camp for three whole weeks, and I was on the best baseball team in town. It should have been a perfect summer, but it wasn’t. It was all good until Jeremy Ross moved into the neighborhood right next door to my best friend, Stanley. I did not like Jeremy Ross. He laughed at me when he struck me out in a baseball game. He had a party on his trampoline, and I wasn’t even invited, but my best friend Stanley was. Jeremy Ross was the one and only person on my enemy list. I never even had an enemy list before he moved into the neighborhood, but as soon as he came along, I needed one. I hung it up in my treehouse where Jeremy Ross was not allowed to go.

Dad understood stuff like enemies. He told me that when he was my age, he had enemies too, but he knew a way to get rid of them. I asked him to tell me how. “I’ll show you how,” he said. He pulled a really old recipe book off the kitchen shelf. Inside, there was a worn-out scrap of paper with faded writing. “Enemy Pie,” he said, satisfied.

You may be wondering what exactly is in enemy pie. I was wondering too, but Dad said the recipe was so secret he couldn’t even tell me. I decided it must be magic. I begged him to tell me something—anything. “I will tell you this,” he said. “Enemy pie is the fastest known way to get rid of enemies.”

Now, of course, this got my mind working. What kinds of disgusting things would I put into a pie for an enemy? I brought Dad some weeds from the garden, but he just shook his head. I brought him earthworms and rocks, but he didn’t think he’d need those. I gave him the gum I’d been chewing all morning, and he gave it right back to me. I went out to play alone. I shot baskets until the ball got stuck on the roof. I threw a boomerang that never came back to me, and all the while, I listened to the sounds of my dad chopping and stirring and blending the ingredients of enemy pie.

This could be a great summer after all. Enemy pie was going to be awful. I tried to imagine how horrible it must smell or, worse yet, what it would look like. But when I was in the backyard looking for ladybugs, I smelled something really, really good, and as far as I could tell, it was coming from our kitchen. I was a bit confused. I went in to ask Dad what was wrong. “Enemy pie shouldn’t smell this good,” I said. But Dad was smart. “If enemy pie smelled bad, your enemy would never eat it,” he said. I could tell he’d made enemy pie before.

The buzzer rang, and Dad put on the oven mitts and pulled the pie out of the oven. It looked like plain old pie. It looked good enough to eat. I was catching on, but still, I wasn’t really sure how this enemy pie worked. What exactly does it do to enemies? Maybe it made their hair fall out or their breath stink. Maybe it made bullies cry. I asked Dad, but he was no help. He wouldn’t tell me a thing.

But while the pie cooled, he filled me in on my job. He talked quietly. “There is one part of enemy pie that I can’t do. In order for it to work, you need to spend a day with your enemy. Even worse, you have to be nice to him. It’s not easy, but that’s the only way that enemy pie can work. Are you sure you want to go through with this?” Of course, I was. It sounded horrible. It was scary, but it was worth a try. All I had to do was spend one day with Jeremy Ross, then he’d be out of my hair for the rest of my life.

I rode my bike to his house and knocked on the door. When Jeremy opened the door, he seemed surprised. He stood on the other side of the screen door and looked at me, waiting for me to say something. I was nervous. “Can you play?” I asked. He looked confused. “I’ll go ask my mom,” he said. He came back with his shoes in his hand, and his mom walked around the corner to say hello. “You boys stay out of trouble,” she said, smiling.

We rode bikes for a while and played on the trampoline. Then we made some water balloons and threw them at the neighbor girls, but we missed. Jeremy’s mom made us lunch. After lunch, we went over to my house. It was strange, but I was kind of having fun with my enemy. He almost seemed nice. But of course, I couldn’t tell Dad that since he had worked so hard to make this enemy pie.

Jeremy Ross liked my basketball hoop. He said he wished he had a basketball hoop, but they didn’t have room for one. I let him win a game just to be nice. Jeremy Ross knew how to throw a boomerang. He threw it, and it came right back to him. I threw it, and it went over my house and into the backyard. When we climbed over the fence to find it, the first thing Jeremy noticed was my treehouse. My treehouse was my treehouse. I was the boss. If my sister wanted in, I didn’t have to let her. If my dad wanted in, I didn’t have to let him. And if Jeremy wanted in… “Can we go in it?” he asked. I knew he was going to ask me that, but he was the only person on my enemy list, and enemies aren’t allowed in my treehouse. But he did teach me how to throw a boomerang, and he did have me over for lunch, and he did let me play on his trampoline. He wasn’t being a very good enemy.

“Okay,” I said, “but hold on.” I climbed up ahead of him and tore the enemy list off the wall. I had a checkerboard and some cards in the treehouse, and we played games until my dad called us down for dinner. We pretended we didn’t hear him, and when he came out to get us, we tried to hide from him, but somehow he found us. Dad made us macaroni and cheese for dinner—my favorite. It was Jeremy’s favorite too. Maybe Jeremy Ross wasn’t so bad after all. I was beginning to think that maybe we should just forget about enemy pie.

But sure enough, after dinner, Dad brought out the pie. I watched as he cut the pie into eight thick slices. “Dad,” I said, “it sure is nice having a new friend in the neighborhood.” I was trying to get his attention and tell him that Jeremy Ross was no longer my enemy, but Dad only smiled and nodded. I think he thought I was just pretending. Dad dished up three plates side by side with big pieces of pie and giant scoops of ice cream. He passed one to me and one to Jeremy. “Wow,” Jeremy said, looking at the pie. “My dad never makes pie like this.”

It was at this point that I panicked. I didn’t want Jeremy to eat enemy pie. He was my friend. “Jeremy, don’t eat it! It’s bad pie! I think it’s poisonous or something.” Jeremy’s fork stopped before reaching his mouth. He crumpled his eyebrows and looked at me funny. I felt relieved. I had saved his life. I was a hero. “If it’s so bad,” Jeremy asked, “then why has your dad already eaten half of it?” I turned to look at my dad. Sure enough, he was eating enemy pie. “Good stuff,” he mumbled through a mouthful, and that was all he said.

I sat there watching them eat enemy pie for a few seconds. Dad was laughing, Jeremy was happily eating, and neither of them was losing any hair. It seemed safe enough, so I took a tiny taste. Enemy pie was delicious. After dessert, Jeremy rode his bike home, but not before inviting me over to play on his trampoline in the morning. He said he’d teach me how to flip.

As for enemy pie, I still don’t know how to make it. I still wonder if enemies really do hate it or if their hair falls out or their breath turns bad. But I don’t know if I’ll ever get an answer because I just lost my best enemy. After spending a day with Jeremy Ross, the little boy realized how much they had in common, and they became good friends.

Did you figure out the secret to enemy pie? Be sure to let me know in the comment section below. I hope you enjoyed our story today. Thank you for being my reading friend. See you next time! Subscribe for more story time, and don’t forget to click the bell so you’ll know each time a new video is posted.

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