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The day after his tenth birthday, the last thing Zak expects - or wants - is to have to give up his room for an ageing old grandmother! With a face like an extra wrinkly raisin, hands as cold as an iceberg and always smelling of smoked fish and custard creams, there's nothing she gives Zak but the chills.
With the help of his friends and a series of tactics inspired by his school's chess club, Zak is convinced it'll be no time before he can reclaim his rightful territory!
But Zak soon discovers that his nani is no ordinary old grandma but a former chess prodigy, able to outwit and outdo him - and his friends - at every turn.
Just as both players begin to forge a mutual respect and a friendship that might finally overcome all obstacles, Zak begins to notice things. Like how Nani sometimes forgets where she is, or who she is... Or how she keeps asking for people who are no longer by her side...
Once he learns the real reason she has been brought to live with them is because she is struggling with Dementia, Zak launches a desperate bid to ensure Nani never forgets who she is ever again. He enters her into the chess competition of a lifetime.
But will Zak's nani remember long enough to play?
There used to be an empty chair at the back of my class, but now a new boy called Ahmet is sitting in it.
He's eight years old (just like me), but he's very strange. He never talks and never smiles and doesn't like sweets - not even lemon sherbets, which are my favourite!
But the truth is, Ahmet really isn't very strange at all. He's a refugee who's run away from a War. A real one. With bombs and fires and bullies that hurt people. And the more I find out about him, the more I want to be his friend.
That's where my best friends Josie, Michael and Tom come in. Because you see, together we've come up with a plan.
From Onjali Q. Rauf, the award-winning and best-selling author of The
Boy at the Back of the Class, comes another incredible story, told with
humour and heart.
'The boy's an absolute menace.'
'He's a bully. A lost cause!'
'Why can't he be more like his sister?'
I've been getting into trouble for as long I can remember. Usually I
don't mind 'cos some of my best, most brilliant ideas have come from
sitting in detention.
But recently it feels like no one believes me about anything - even
when I'm telling the truth! And it's only gotten worse since I played a
prank on the old man who lives in the park.
Everyone thinks I'm just a bully. They don't believe I could be a hero.
But I'm going to prove them all wrong...
Told from the perspective of a bully, this book explores themes of
bullying and homelessness, while celebrating kindness, friendship and
the potential everyone has to change for the good.
No one is too small to make a change. Growing up, there is so much
out of our control and to feel frustrated about. But in this
inspiring and practical handbook, bestselling children's author and
Human Rights campaigner, Onjali Rauf, shares her top ten ways for
finding hope, creating change and making a difference. With the
help of her favourite fictional characters and some of the most
inspiring people she has ever met, Onjali invites readers to dive
in and discover everything there is to know about kindness,
empathy, friendship and fighting for the things that matter. (Plus,
cool stuff like X-ray vision and detecting negative forces. Yes!)
Because with a bit of compassion, a big dollop of hope and even the
smallest act of kindness, magical things can happen. Hope is on the
horizon; here's how children everywhere can find it. Parental
guidance recommended: issues related to discrimination, injustice
and prejudice are included.
The debut picture book from Onjali Q. Raúf, the bestselling and award-winning
author of The Boy at the Back of the Class.
There's a new girl in my class. She has eyes as wide and as golden as a tiger's, a face as
pale as a glass of milk, and hair as shiny as a mirror. I'd like to be her friend. But she
never wants to play with me in the playground or makes sandcastles in the sandpit.
The cleverest people I know say that the new girl is sad because she had to leave her
home, her family, her school, her toys, her books and all her friends too.
But I've got a plan! There's something I can do to make her feel better when she's
missing everything she's left behind . . .
This heartfelt story about the power of friendship and kindness shows young
children what steps they can take to make refugee children feel welcome.
From Onjali Q. Rauf, the award-winning and best-selling author of
The Boy at the Back of the Class, comes an incredible story about
missing histories and the concept of a universal family, told with
humour and heart. Leo and his best friend Sangeeta are the odd ones
out in their school. But as Leo's dad is always telling him, it's
because they're special. Only thing is, if they're so special, how
come they never see anyone who looks like them in their school
history books? Then, on a class trip to a nearby cathedral, Leo's
attention is drawn to a large marble slab high above the doors of
the hall. Right there, bang in the middle of a list of war heroes,
Leo finds himself staring at something incredible: his own name.
Desperate to know who this other Leo was, the two friends embark on
a search. And together, they begin to uncover missing stories from
the past, ones which they are determined to put back into their
rightful place in the pages of history. Touching on themes of
historical racism, The Lion Above the Door shines a light on the
stories our history books have yet to contain and the power of
friendships that can last through generations. The first edition of
this book also contains a special collection of historical photos
and stories of real life forgotten heroes from World War Two.
Written with great empathy and Rauf's trademark humour, The Great
(Food) Bank Heist is a moving story that gives a child's-eye view
of the increasing problem of food poverty. On Thursdays, Nelson,
Ashley and Mum head out to the bank. But not just any old bank -
the food bank. With its shining tins and packets of food stacked
from floor to ceiling, Nelson thinks it's the best kind of bank
there is. But there's a thief in town, and the shelves of the food
bank are getting emptier each day, leaving people hungrier than
ever. For the sake of his family and everyone else's, Nelson needs
to make them stop. But can he and his friends really be the ones to
catch the bank robber?
'My mum is up there somewhere. She's waiting -- I can feel it. I
just have to find her in time, that's all ... Because when I do,
I'll know the truth about who stole her. ' Told through the
innocent voice of a child, this is a story that celebrates the
power of hope and resilience, from the author of The Boy at the
Back of the Class. On her tenth birthday, Sophie makes a wish -- a
wish for her mum. After school that same day, Sophie and her
brother are rushed out of school and driven far, far away. So
Sophie sets out to find out the truth -- about the wish and about
what happened to her mother. And in doing so she ends up on an
adventure she never could have foreseen...one that involves a very
clever squirrel, a homeless man named Harry, the Royal Observatory
at Greenwich, and the biggest star in Hollywood... A story that
explores the subtle faces and endless impacts of domestic violence.
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