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Little Beaver s search for a friend he thinks he hears across a pond is perfect for every child who's ever felt lonely."Children old enough to long for friends of their own will nestle right into this appealing story....Ideal for reading aloud at the beginning of the school year of during camp sessions, when there's a little bit of Little Beaver in every kid." -- "Booklist""Perfect for little ones at quiet-time or bedtime." -- "Publishers Weekly ""Enchanting." -- "The New York Times Book Review"
Just what is a grumpalump? It's very still. A bear can stare at it, a mole can roll on it, a dove can shove it, a yak can whack it and an armadillo can use it for a pillow. But just what is this lump, and why is it such a grump?
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Nine ducks out for a walk outwit the clever and hungry Mr. Fox, in a counting book that teaches small children the basics of numbers. Reprint.
Queen of Bebop brilliantly chronicles the life of jazz singer Sarah Vaughan, one of the most influential and innovative musicians of the twentieth century and a pioneer of women’s and civil rights Sarah Vaughan, a pivotal figure in the formation of bebop, influenced a broad array of singers who followed in her wake, yet the breadth and depth of her impact—not just as an artist, but also as an African-American woman—remain overlooked. Drawing from a wealth of sources as well as on exclusive interviews with Vaughan’s friends and former colleagues, Queen of Bebop unravels the many myths and misunderstandings that have surrounded Vaughan while offering insights into this notoriously priv...
Lucy Anna lives near a great wood. And in that wood live the Finders -- two fumbling, bumbling monsters who like to take what doesn't belong to them One day, they find Lucy Anna's little red horse and take him away into the wood. Can she outwit the Finders and get her horse back?
When a cat catcher captures a close-knit group of cats that likes to hang out on Tiffany Street, Shadow the cat devises a plan to rescue them.
A sensitive family tale in which baby Gemma is up to mischief again - and it's up to her smart older brother to solve the problem!Baby Gemma refuses to eat. She throws her breakfast on the floor, plays with her food, feeds her biscuits to the birds and even gives her dinner to the dog. But one day, her brother has a clever idea - can he persuade Gemma to eat up?
This book challenges the notion that static principles of inclusive practice can be embedded and measured in Higher Education. It introduces the original concept of Postdigital Positionality as a dynamic lens through which inclusivity policies in universities might be reimagined.