Each colorful photograph is accompanied by the word, and the book is separated into themes―rescue vehicles, construction vehicles, on the farm, on the road, on the water, cars, and flying machines. This is a great way to build vocabulary for little ones fascinated by trucks, cars, diggers, tractors, and other things that go.
Alphaprints goes under the ocean to meet 20 fabulous sea creatures--from the tiny seahorse to the big, blue whale--all ingeniously created from embossed fingerprints and photographs of everyday things. This casebound board book has a creature on each page, with a lighthearted rhyming couplet that tells you something about each character: Stingray has wings and glides like a plane. Starfi…
Watch out! Here comes Mr Bump, Bump Bump! and the terribly messy Mr. Messy. Read about their antics in these two stories which will have you giggling out loud
What’s the weather? Wake up to this ultimate reference, teeming with fascinating facts, amazing features, the latest science, and tons of close-up images of the wildest weather on the planet. Did you know that a bolt of lightning can crack through the air at up to 136,000 miles per hour and reach temperatures hotter than the surface of the sun? Or that if all the ice in the Antarctic melte…
It's the first day of school and Little Miss Tiny is very excited! There is so much to learn and so many new friends to make. Step in to Little Miss Sunshine's classroom and join all your favourite Mr. Men and Little Miss for a busy day at school!
What things can you see by the sea? This new series of illustrated board books provides an ideal introduction to the seaside for toddlers who are just beginning to discover the world around them. The pages feature die-cut holes for young readers to look through, so that they can see part of what is happening on the next out-and-about scene.
When All the King's Men was first published in 1946, Sinclair Lewis pronounced it "massive, impressive...one of our few national galleries of character." Diana Trilling, reviewing it for the Nation, wrote, "For sheer virtuosity, for the sustained drive of its prose, for the speed and the evenness of its pacing, for its precision of language...I doubt indeed whether it can be matched in American…