Once there was a princess named Lisa. She was the prettiest princess in all the land. One day, Lisa went to the woods to gather violets. As she worked, she sang sweetly. A wicked old witch saw her. The witch did not like pretty things and changed Lisa into a black raven. Find out how Peter rescues Lisa and makes her human again. Yes, there is a giant, magic cloak, magic horse and glass mountain involved.
Added by: zheka1995-1995 | Karma: 9357.69 | Fiction literature | 7 January 2014
3
Grumpty Badgers Christmas
Christmas is coming and everyone is so excited - except for Grumpy Badger. Piffle he shouts. I am going to sleep until spring, and if anyone wakes me up I shall be VERY grumpy. But then Grumpy Badger has three visitors... and there is a great crisis. Will he learn the error of his ways before it's too late?
Sing along with this silly children's song complete with a CD recording and musical notation!
Sing along and count down the ten adorable puppies taking up space on one very small bed! This well-known children's song will have all readers singing out loud.
A CD featuring There Were Ten in the Bed and two other songs in the series, The Ants Go Marching and This Little Light of Mine, is included in this irresistible and reasonably priced package.
This adventurous picture book is the tenth title in this critically acclaimed series for toddlers by the poet Tony Mitton and the illustrator Ant Parker. Young readers climb aboard a super submarine with Mouse, Rabbit, and Bird and learn what submarines do, how they do it, what makes them go down, and how they come back up again. Appealing artwork complements the lively rhyming text, and there is a helpful illustrated glossary of technical words at the end to help build vocabulary and identify what's what in super submarines!
As humans continue to encroach on wildlands, quality and quantity of wildlife habitat decreases before our eyes. A housing development here, a shopping mall there, a few more trees cut here, another road put in there, each of these diminishes available habitat. Unless the cumulative effects of multiple simultaneous development projects are recognized and incorporated at the beginning of project development, we will continue to see wildlife habitat disappear at unprecedented rates.