Your Search Results

      • Children's & YA
        June 2021

        Learn in Colour with Barbie

        by Cécile Marbehant

        Girls will love colouring Barbie and her friends and completing educational activities with the rainbow pencil.   Iconic Mattel license Redesigned characters  Plenty of cool stickers Smart poster-to-colour to be detached A rainbow pencil securely strapped on the front cover 5-7 age-group   See more on Caramel Youtube channel: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0-kjBFJjVMM   See more on Caramel latest catalogue: https://catalog.caramel.be/wp-content/uploads/2020/09/S0224-S0225-LR.pdf

      • School editions of fiction texts

        Web Cam Scam

        by Jillian Powell

      • School editions of fiction texts

        Splitzaroni

        by Jonny Zucker

      • School editions of fiction texts

        Missed Call

        by Jillian Powell

      • School editions of fiction texts

        Space Pirates

        by David Orme

      • School editions of fiction texts

        Sprinters

        by Jonny Zucker

      • Educational: English literature

        Ghost in the Artroom

        by Bob Doucet

      • Teaching of a specific subject

        Environment Poems

        For the Key Stage 2 Classroom

        by Andrew Frolish

        Environment Poems for the Key Stage 2 Classroom provides a selection of poems, lesson plans and worksheets, designed to be used by Key Stage 2 teachers in Literacy lessons. The poems and lesson plans relate to the objectives set out in the new Primary Literacy Strategy and are based on a variety of environmental issues, such as recycling, dramatic weather changes and environmental disasters (oil spill). Their interest coincides with the need for schools to raise awareness of environmental concerns and to become more sustainable organisations. On lesson plans, cross-curricular links are identified and worksheets support learning in other subject areas. - - - -

      • School editions of fiction texts

        Nervous

        by Tony Norman

      • School editions of fiction texts

        Killer Sharks

        by Stan Cullimore

      • School editions of fiction texts

        Dangerous Stunts

        by Jonny Zucker

      • Teaching of a specific subject

        Teacher Book

        by Jonny Zucker

      • Modern & contemporary fiction (post c 1945)

        Life of Pi

        by Yann Martel

        WINNER OF THE 2002 BOOKER PRIZEAfter the tragic sinking of a cargo ship, one solitary lifeboat remains bobbing on the wild, blue Pacific. The crew of the surviving vessel consists of a hyena, a zebra (with a broken leg), a female orang-utan, a 450-pound Royal Bengal tiger and Pi - a 16-year-old Indian boy. The scene is set for one of the most extraordinary pieces of literary fiction of recent years.

      • Biography & True Stories
        March 2015

        American Authors Unplugged

        Interviews about Books

        by Martha Cinader

        Representative of modern American Literature, the conversations with authors  in this book are evenly divided between men and women who bring to life the experiences of natives, immigrants, slaves and rebels. As a whole, they address the enduring themes of freedom and the pursuit of happiness. Following is a list of the authors interviewed. For further information about the interviews please refer to the supporting document. Rudolfo Anaya - Zia Summer Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni - Sister of My Heart Russel Banks - Cloudsplitter Nora Okja Keller - Comfort Woman Dr. Leonard Shlain - The Alphabet Versus the Goddess Barbara Chase-Riboud - The President's Daughter A.A. Carr - Eye Killers Lan Cao - Monkey Bridge Hal Sirowitz - My Therapist Said Kate Horsley - Crazy Woman Dennis McFarland - A Face at the Window

      • Children's & YA
        April 2024

        One Alley Summer

        by Anne Ylvisaker

        The summer before middle school is a time of anxiety and change. A pitch-perfect novel in verse about one girl’s wish to simultaneously break free and to belong.  In the summer before her first year of middle school, word-chanting, rope-skipping Phee skips her way to imagined fame, writes down her innermost secret thoughts from the safety of a treehouse, and imagines in horror that her new classmates will eat her alive. Suddenly, her well-worn alley world feels too small. So when Mercy Jones moves next door, along with Mercy’s skateboard and her don’t-mess-with-me attitude, Phee sees the chance for her universe to expand. Even if it means leaving some things behind . . . It is a time of dares, of a legendary dog named Bull, of stretching comfort zones, and of old friendships made over in new ways. And it all takes place over the course of one alley summer.  Using pitch-perfect, richly rendered verse, Anne Ylvisaker captures the tone and insights of one girl’s wish to simultaneously break free and to belong.

      Subscribe to our

      newsletter