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      • Trusted Partner
        Children's & YA

        I Like You - Just Like That!

        by Neele/ Marta Balmaseda

        A poetic picture book that makes it easy to forget arguments and anger: the little elephant is in a bad mood and kicks a stone. The stone inadvertently hits the flamingo – and the complaining and annoyance just keeps spreading. By the river, in the bush, on the savannah: just like that! Until a little meerkat has had enough and just hugs the snarling leopard. The leopard’s heart becomes light and gradually all the animals notice how good it is when we’re nice to one another. Just like that!

      • Trusted Partner
        Picture books, activity books & early learning material
        2019

        What Grows in the Forest

        by Kateryna Mikhalitsyna

        This is the third picture book from the informative series about trees by Ukrainian writer Kateryna Mikhalitsyna and illustrator Oksana Bula. This is a story about how a grumpy badger and naughty squirrels saved the forest from the fire. Readers will also learn how spruce and larch prepare for the winter, and whether oak moss is actually a moss and why one should not burn deadwood because its not really dead. The book is also interactive: you can try and find all the firebugs hidden in the pictures, learn to distinguish different trees and make a garland in ecostyle.

      • Trusted Partner
        Picture books, activity books & early learning material
        2018

        Tukoni, the Forest Friends

        by Oksana Bula

        All night a thunderstorm raged in the woods. The tukoni named Wanderer was sleeping and didn’t notice anything, but was awoken by the alarm signal that came from his best friend, the tree. Tukoni the Wanderer convenes the other tukoni, including Moth, who is making a magical comforter. The tukoni gather together and save Wanderer’s best friend, the tree that was struck by lightning during the night. The book has the title that it does because it’s about friendship with the place where you live. People live on the planet Earth. Tukoni live in the forest. For the tukoni, the forest isn’t a fortress, a place of work, or their property. The tukoni are friends with each other, but each and every of them is also a friend of the forest, the place where they live. It’s important to treat the place where you live as a friend.

      • Trusted Partner
        True stories (Children's/YA)
        August 2018

        Niños

        by María Jose Ferrada, María Elena Valdez

        Thirty-four poems, one for each of the young children (all under the age of 14) that were executed, arrested or disappeared during the Chilean dictatorship. A book dedicated to all those little Chilean victims, but also to all the children that each day suffer the consequences of violence.

      • Trusted Partner
        Family & home stories (Children's/YA)
        October 2020

        Casas

        by María José Ferrada, Pep Carrió

        The authors of this book take us on a journey through the different ways of inhabiting a house. Based on illustrations by Pep Carrió made with acrylic markers, the writer María José Ferrada uses poetic language and humor to propose a set of micro stories that invite readers to observe their own ways of inhabiting the world.

      • Trusted Partner
        Poetry (Children's/YA)

        El bolso

        by María José Ferrada, Ana Palmero Cáceres

        Keys, handkerchiefs, coins, three flowers from last spring, a bird. Boys and girls are expert observers and that is why they know that a mother’s purse fits everything. A book in Braille that reminds its readers that when observations are mixed with imagination, the most everyday objects are capable of coming to poetic life.

      • Trusted Partner
        Poetry (Children's/YA)
        2015

        Antes no había nada, después comencé a imaginar mi propio jardín (There was nothing before. Then I began to imagine my own garden)

        by Chiara Carrer

        Collection of beloved things, of techniques, and various artistic instruments ( from naturalist and abstract illustration) with which Carrer brings various plants and trees to life. An open garden to every reader curious about shapes and colors, those who like to ponder, who want to know more about the.

      • Trusted Partner
        Children's & YA
        October 2021

        Alice and the kind gorillas

        by Christine Warugaba/Valerie Bouthyette

        Alice is a young girl who out of curiosity, follows a tourist car and eventually gets lost. She lives in the forest on her own until she is found by kind gorillas.

      • Trusted Partner
        Children's & YA
        October 2021

        Bella becomes a giraffe princess

        by Christine Warugaba/Valerie Bouthyette

        On her ninth birthday, a lonely orphan named Bella gets a visit from a giraffe. The giraffe later takes her to Giraffe Land to meet the queen. While in Giraffe Land, Bella breaks the spell of of a witch who had planned on destroying Giraffe Land.

      • Trusted Partner
        Children's & YA
        October 2021

        The 4 Police Soaps

        by Christine Warugaba/ Valerie Bouthyette

        In one school bathroom, four soaps decide to take action after being ignored by children for many years. They become police soaps.

      • Trusted Partner
        Children's & YA
        2020

        Listen to Your Diddalum

        by Child, Emily / Lebedeva, Maria

        From children's book author Emily Child and popular illustrator Maria Lebedeva comes a new picture book that explores feelings for children in the most incredible way, Listen to Your Diddalum! What is your Diddalum? Is it that funny feeling in your stomach when you're excited? Or is it exploding fireworks? Is it a slimy slug, or a fluttering butterfly? What is your Diddalum and how do you listen to it?

      • Trusted Partner
        Picture storybooks
        2020

        What a Wonderful World This Can Be

        by Mary-An

        What a Wonderful World This Can Be is a ground-breaking picture book about how small acts can have big consequences. Author Mary-An tackles large topics like sustainability, bullying, and poverty, as well as incredibly heart-melting themes of kindness, bravery, and persistence. In this book, a little girl wonders at the wonderful world that is all around her. Although, she is slightly put out when she sees someone begging for food, or oil in the ocean, or even a bully at school—what can she do? One thing at a time! "One piece of trash picked out of the sea, one word of kindness to someone in need, one word to a bully, one hug to a friend, a thing one by one, though the things never end."

      • Trusted Partner
        Children's & YA
        2020

        The World is Mine

        by Tahmineh Haddadi

        My dad and I head out of the house and take the world’s strangest trip; one that has a car, a bicycle, a horse, camels, and boats and takes us to the end of the world. This is not an ordinary trip. While on it, we get disappointed, fail, and change our route, but we learn that explorers never lose hope. We have hope, my dad and I. Because we’ll reach our dreams by getting to the furthest place in the world. “The World is Mine” is all about hope and overcoming obstacles in life. It helps children – especially those with disabilities – to understand that by employing their imagination, they can move beyond any limitations. It depicts the combination of hope and imagination as the essence that drives life forward regardless of the cards one has been dealt. AWARDS & RECOGNITION: Image of the Books Winner, Russia 2020

      • Trusted Partner
        Children's & YA

        One Hair, One Angel

        by Avianti Armand

        Mother's hair keeps on falling. The hair that previously looked like a beautiful crown on Mother's head become thinner day by day. But they said every one hair that falls, Mother gains one angel.

      • Trusted Partner
        Early learning / early learning concepts
        October 2017

        Una cabeza distinta (A different head)

        by Luis Panini, Chiara Carrer

        This child tells us that he is not happy with the head that he has. He thinks it is a wrong head. The parents, after listening to him, take him to a specialist, who agrees with the little one. A mysterious man dressed in black supplies him with heads in exchange for his own. The child tries several, until he finds the one he was looking for. A reindeer head, a crocodile head, a whisk head: the narrator child and protagonist of this story tells us about his disagreement with the head he has and the vicissitudes that he has to go through to find the head with which he will finally agree: the head of a grown man, of a mathematician. This is a story of search for identity and growth, developed with fine fantasy and humor, with the wisdom of someone he has sought and perhaps already found.

      • Trusted Partner
        Picture storybooks
        October 2022

        My Brother's Squiggle

        by Paxton, Kirsty / Lötter, Megan

        From the same talents that brought you The Chalk Giraffe comes a new adventure, My Brother's Squiggle. What if your drawings magically came to life, only to prove rather demanding art critics? Oh, the hassle! One morning, a little boy with a big imagination draws a tiger. He’s just certain it’s a fearsome tiger! But his sister has doubts… it looks just like a line and a squiggle! As their debate takes off, suddenly the two siblings are thrown into a colourful world where make-believe and reality find a meeting place, and a tiger, a T-Rex and a family of giraffes become their teammates to figure it all out. Dive into this tale of creativity and perspective/empathy, this story knits each child's unique creativity into the universal theme of complex and growing sibling relationships.

      • Trusted Partner
        Early learning: first experiences
        July 2018

        ¡No!

        by Jorge Alderete

        No, Lautaro, don’t do that. No, don’t do that either. Please don’t, especially not that! This amazing book is about Lautario’s brief compendium before turning 5. It is written by his father, the world famous illustrator Dr. Alderete. This is a great opportunity to establish the limits of authority from a hilarious perspective.

      • Trusted Partner
        Children's & YA
        January 2018

        Titepetl Feels Angry

        by Anna Khromova (Author), Irena Panarina (illustrator)

        Titepetl is a real volcano! When it gets angry, it can lead to serious consequences like ruins, pain, fear, and friends leaving. Just like Titepetl, we all have emotions that can sometimes feel like volcanoes. Titepetl Feels Angry tells the story of the powerful Black Mountain and the mischievous Black Cloud, teaching young readers how to handle anger and why it's important.   From 3 to 6 years, 822 words Rightsholders: hanna.bulhakova@ranok-school.com

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