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Daniel Cook visits a farm, in this book that introduces several kinds of farm animals, including sheep, cows, and pigs.
Daniel Cook goes on a plane, in this book that introduces types of airplanes, parts, controls, and the history of flight.
Mmmm. Daniel gets to drink milk fresh from a cow. In this title in the This is Daniel Cook series, he also meets and learns all about sheep, floppy-eared pigs, horses and other farm animals. Charmed by his boundless enthusiasm, children will be eager to join Daniel and learn about the world from a kid's perspective. Each book closes with an activity that encourages young readers to create along with Daniel. Kids will be eager to join in the adventures of a little boy who gets to do so many different things. If Daniel can do it, so can they!
Up, up and away! Daniel does a flight check, gets the ?all clear? and takes off into the big blue sky. Join Daniel as he soars through the clouds and learns all about planes and the history of flight, in this title in the This is Daniel Cook series. Charmed by his boundless enthusiasm, children will be eager to join Daniel and learn about the world from a kid's perspective. Each book closes with an activity that encourages young readers to create along with Daniel. Kids will be eager to join in the adventures of a little boy who gets to do so many different things. If Daniel can do it, so can they!
Daniel visits a bee farm and learns about different kinds of bees, how bees make honey, and how a beekeeper gets the honey from the hive.
Poets are makers, etymologically speaking. In practice, they are also thieves. Over a long career, from the early 1690s to the late 1730s, Jonathan Swift thrived on a creative tension between original poetry-making and the filching of familiar material from the poetic archive. The most extensive study of Swift's verse to appear in more than thirty years, Reading Swift's Poetry offers detailed readings of dozens of major poems, as well as neglected and recently recovered pieces. This book reaffirms Swift's prominence in competing literary traditions as diverse as the pastoral and the political, the metaphysical and the satirical, and demonstrates the persistence of unlikely literary tropes across his multifaceted career. Daniel Cook also considers the audacious ways in which Swift engages with Juvenal's satires, Horace's epistles, Milton's epics, Cowley's odes, and an astonishing array of other canonical and forgotten writers.