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All About Cats is a collection of hilarious rhymes . . . all about
cats! These short, funny rhymes are brought to life with
illustrations from Axel Scheffler, the bestselling illustrator of
The Gruffalo. Cats are sleek, and cats are slick. They read, and do
arithmetic! Have you ever seen a cat playing a piano? Or taking a
bubble bath with a rubber duck? Find out what cats really get up to
when people aren't around! Axel Scheffler's charming and witty
illustrations introduce all kinds of cats - making mischief,
playing games, singing songs and out on adventures. This collection
of hilarious, quirky poems by Frantz Wittkamp is wonderfully
adapted from German to English for the very first time by
celebrated children's author David Henry Wilson. With fourteen
delightfully funny short poems, and full-page colour illustrations
by Axel Scheffler, the genius illustrator of Room on the Broom,
Zog, The Smeds and the Smoos and many more, this collection is sure
to entertain children young and old, and is the perfect gift for
any cat fan.
Rouse, a Council official, is visiting the theatre run by Mike
Pemberton-Hawkesley, and his mission is simple: to save the Council
money. His brainwave is to turn the theatre into a storage facility
for files; Mike, understandably, is outraged. Mavis Dinwiddy -
intervenes and the hilarious absurdity of the situation, compounded
by Rouse's very idiosyncratic verbal style, is maintained right up
to the end of this surprising and enigmatic play. Simple to stage -
no set is required - this is an ideal festival piece.
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A Penguin Like Me
Marcus Pfister; Translated by David Henry Wilson
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R343
Discovery Miles 3 430
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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Molly loves to listen to her dad's bedtime stories. Once upon a time, he says, everyone was green, squirrels sang in choirs, tiny people lived in Aunt Elsie's pot plant and of course, rabbits could fly . . . but can all this really be true? Molly thinks her dad's just being silly as usual, but no-one's bedtime stories are as good as his. So cuddle up on the sofa and pick one of these fourteen fantastically funny stories to read together before bed. Which one will be your favourite?
Melanie von Bismarck's brilliant collection of short stories is cleverly translated from the German by David Henry Wilson, author of the Jeremy James series, and is brought to life by the warm, witty and richly detailed pictures by Axel Scheffler, illustrator of The Gruffalo.
With a jacket, extra-thick paper, and a special ribbon to mark your place in the book, Flying Rabbits, Singing Squirrels and Other Bedtime Stories makes a great present – truly a book to treasure.
Mock-heroic poetry is one of the most characteristic genres of
English neoclassicism in the eighteenth century. Derived from
French models, the mock-heroic became something more than merely a
parody of the serious epic: relieved of its gravity, it was
nevertheless a legitimate and independent form of epic poetry. This
book is the first comprehensive study of the theory, the
conventions and the history of the mock-heroic genre. In the first
part, Ulrich Broich shows how mock-heroic poetry combines the
characteristics of various discourses - epic, comedy, parody,
satire and occasional poetry. The 'polyphonic' genre which emerges
from this analysis stands in ironic contrast to the neoclassical
ideal of decorum in a harmonious unity of discourse and form. The
second part traces the history of mock-heroic poetry: its foreign
sources, its beginnings in England, the 'rivalry' with other forms
of comic narrative, and its decline in the second half of the
eighteenth century.
Jeremy James always seems to be getting into mischief and is fed up
with grown-ups never knowing the answer to important questions . .
. Join Jeremy James as he finds himself in a runaway car, causes
havoc at a birthday party and comes up with a cunning plan on how
to get rich. Illustrated throughout by the award-winning Axel
Scheffler, David Henry Wilson's funny and gentle stories about the
inimitable Jeremy James are much-loved classics, perfect for
younger readers.
Mock-heroic poetry is one of the most characteristic genres of
English neoclassicism in the eighteenth century. Derived from
French models, the mock-heroic became something more than merely a
parody of the serious epic: relieved of its gravity, it was
nevertheless a legitimate and independent form of epic poetry. This
book is the first comprehensive study of the theory, the
conventions and the history of the mock-heroic genre. In the first
part, Ulrich Broich shows how mock-heroic poetry combines the
characteristics of various discourses - epic, comedy, parody,
satire and occasional poetry. The 'polyphonic' genre which emerges
from this analysis stands in ironic contrast to the neoclassical
ideal of decorum in a harmonious unity of discourse and form. The
second part traces the history of mock-heroic poetry: its foreign
sources, its beginnings in England, the 'rivalry' with other forms
of comic narrative, and its decline in the second half of the
eighteenth century.
Over the 29 years of his short life, Franz Michael Felder worked
with furious productivity to better himself and the lives of those
around him. From his humble origins in the Austrian village of
Schoppernau, he went on to found workers' cooperatives, a political
party and even a public library in his own home, while also writing
many literary works. A Life in the Making is both the culmination
of this extraordinary career and a chronicle of its development. It
is a story of early hardship and fortitude, of Felder's relentless
zeal for learning and his lifelong effort to reconcile his own
expanding horizons with the enforced confines of the community he
was born to. Unfolding in prose of limpid beauty, A Life in the
Making becomes a deeply moving tribute to Felder's wife Nanni, and
to his enduring belief in the possibility of a better world.
Without a beginning and without an end, Tristram Shandy moves in
many different directions, defying the conventional expectations of
its readers. Wolfgang Iser shows how Sterne exploits the philosophy
of his day and its cognitive deficiencies, using digression, humour
and play to convey experience of subjectivity, and implicitly to
expose the traditional concept of the self.
Originally published in English in 1989, from a 1980 German
edition, this book provides a comprehensive study of Oscar Wilde's
work. It aims to gain fresh insight into his literary and critical
oeuvre by fully analysing each of his works on the basis of a
textually oriented interpretation, taking equal account of the
biographical and intellectual contexts. Professor Kohl's
starting-point is the thesis that Wilde's identity - both personal
and artistic - can only be adequately described in terms of a
conflict between two opposing forces: individualism and convention.
This conflict colours not only Wilde's use of Romantic and
Victorian images and motifs, but also his modern portrayal of the
individual's alienation from society, the loss of transcendent
values, the sovereignty of subjectivity and autonomous art, and
also his formal experiments with language. This is a penetrating
and highly readable account of Wilde as a 'conformist rebel'.
Lorina, a young schoolgirl, is led by a black rabbit through a wood
to a magical land. There she finds a race of green people, who are
all overworked, starving and suffering from the toxic fumes
billowing out of a nearby castle. She decides to gain access to the
castle for the poor green people, and within its walls she meets
the "insiders", selfish creatures who hoard all the resources and
treat the outsiders as slaves. Her quest leads her to encounter the
bureaurat, the superviper, the farmadillo and, eventually, the
awful Piggident himself.Will she be able to save the green people
from the cruelty of these "insiders"?
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