|
Showing 1 - 25 of
29 matches in All Departments
Five fantastic stories and one non-fiction book from Star Reading.
With brilliant parent notes to help you get the most out of every
book with your child, all at pink book band level.
"Rigby Rocket" is designed to offer links from guided to
independent reading. It is linked to guided reading objectives,
allowing children to practise valuable skills following a guided
reading session. The titles are levelled to "Book Bands for Guided
Reading", and provide stories that children are able to read
independently. Each title contains reading notes written
specifically for parents/Learning Support Assistants. These focus
on key reading skills and encourage discussion to improve
children's comprehension. The "Pink Level" titles are aimed at
children in Reception.
Part of the Rigby Star Family|, this Rigby Star Independent reader
is levelled for independent, follow-on reading from the KS1 guided
reading sessions. |, this reader is levelled for independent,
follow-on reading from the KS1 guided reading sessions.
|
The Hard Rhoade (Paperback)
Jennifer Jacobson; Illustrated by Michael Stokes; Edited by Brenda Wright
|
R295
Discovery Miles 2 950
|
Ships in 10 - 15 working days
|
|
Reflections (Paperback)
Jennifer Jacobson; Sandrine Gasq Dion
|
R535
Discovery Miles 5 350
|
Ships in 10 - 15 working days
|
Book 15 This book is part of a series.It contains Graphic language,
violence, and homosexual relations. Glory days? If high school was
their glory days, the outcast gay teens at the outreach centers run
by Caden Fournier were screwed. For most of them, the torment they
received at those schools and at the hands of their own families
was enough to make living on the street seem like a better
proposition. Enter Camp Pride and its devoted staff of volunteers
and backers. For college students Kory Maguire and Will Cooper, the
camp was a way for them to help abandoned and confused gay kids
find their way in life. And it didn't hurt that the incredible
hunks - ex-Navy SEALs Jacob Steele and Seth Ralston - were working
there, too. Straight Kory ran into Jacob in Seattle several times
and found himself having lots of definitely un-straight thoughts
about him. Will had been abused by his ex-boyfriend and was
skittish of all men now - especially if they were twice his size,
like Seth. Werewolves Jacob and Seth have found their mates in Kory
and Will. But have the fates gotten it wrong? What if Kory can't
commit to a relationship with a man? Is Will too skittish to trust
and give himself to someone so much more powerful than he? And can
everyone put their own problems aside so that the campers can feel
safe and find strength in being loved?
|
|