Parents' Guide to

The Ice Cream Machine

Book Adam Rubin Adventure 2022
The Ice Cream Machine Poster Image

Common Sense Media Review

Carrie Kingsley By Carrie Kingsley , based on child development research. How do we rate?

age 8+

Fun, wacky short stories combine ice cream and adventures.

Parents Need to Know

Why Age 8+?

Any Positive Content?

Parent and Kid Reviews

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What's the Story?

In THE ICE CREAM MACHINE, author Adam Rubin tells six separate adventure stories linked together by one delicious treat: ice cream. A boy and his robot nanny hop around the world looking for rare kinds of ice cream. A girl with a gift for building mechanical helpers creates the freshest ice cream anyone has ever tasted. The sorcerer's assistant in a small kingdom tries to solve problems for a king when the sorcerer leaves without warning. There's a bully on a beach boardwalk during an ice cream eating contest, another terrorizing neighborhood kids with an ice cream truck, and the lone human on a space ship among aliens, dreaming of things that remind him of home.

Is It Any Good?

Our review:
Parents say: Not yet rated
Kids say: Not yet rated

Each of the six stories opens a world of delicious imagination, combining a zany premise with messages about empathy and perseverance. The Ice Cream Machine is a little uneven as far as pacing, but that offers readers a variety of storytelling styles and content: an adventurous robot appeals to one reader, while a sorcerer in a tower appeals to another. Having a different talented illustrator for each story emphasizes each story's unique take on ice cream. The story of Rhonda is a glimpse into the mind of a child who isn't neurotypical, and there are likely many readers who relate to her having a hard time reading body language and visual clues. Author Adam Rubin's note at the end of the book is sweetly encouraging, especially the three tips for kids writing their own versions.

Talk to Your Kids About ...

  • Families can talk about what they would do with a robot like Kelly in The Ice Cream Machine. Would you use the robot's talents differently than Shiro does?

  • Do you know anyone like Rhonda, or do you ever have a hard time reading people's emotions? What makes it hard to understand how people are feeling?

  • What would your magical ice cream machine do?

Book Details

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