


And so begins the only thing that could make life in Petersville worth living: getting the recipe, making the doughnuts, and bringing them back to the town through his very own doughnut stand. His suspicions about his new town are confirmed when he’s tricked into believing the local general store has life-changing chocolate cream doughnuts, when in fact the owner hasn’t made them in years. It’s like suddenly they’re supposed to be this other family, one that can survive without bagels and movie theaters. Tristan isn't Gifted or Talented like his sister Jeanine, and he's always been okay with that because he can make a perfect chocolate chip cookie and he lives in the greatest city in the world. But his life takes a turn for the worse when his parents decide to move to middle-of-nowhere Petersville―a town with one street and no restaurants. Superfudge meets The Lemonade War in this funny, heartwarming book about change, adventure, family, and of course, doughnuts. Tristan isn’t Gifted or Talented like his sister Jeanine, and he’s always been okay with that because he can make a perfect chocolate chip cookie and he lives in the greatest city in the world.

But even with the whole town training and supporting him, Tris isn't sure he can live with what it takes to takes to win.Superfudge meets The Lemonade War in this funny, heartwarming series debut about change, adventure, family, and of course, doughnuts. If Tris can win "Can You Cut It," the cutthroat competitive kids' cooking show, he can get the cash to buy the machine. The Donut Robot makes 96 dozen doughnuts an hour. There's only one solution: The Belshaw Donut Robot. Petersville needs to become a tourist destination, and Tris's shop could be a big part of it, if he can keep up with demand. Folks keep moving away, and if they can't get people to stay, Petersville may disappear altogether. And that's not the worst part, Petersville has its own supply problem: it doesn't have enough people.

The Doughnut Stop has a major supply issue: they just can't make enough doughnuts. But just when things are looking up, problems start rolling in. He and his family have gotten closer, he's got a great new best friend, and his doughnut business is thriving. Tris Levin thought moving from New York City to middle-of-nowhere Petersville meant life would definitely get worse.but it actually somehow got better.
