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It hums and it thrums through day and night the magical, mystical
rhythm of life! Follow the story of music back to the very
beginning. Did it start with a stomp or a clap? This playful poem
is an ode to the colourful world of music and rhythm.
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Telephone Tales (Hardcover)
Gianni Rodari; Illustrated by Valerio Vidali; Translated by Antony Shugaar
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R632
R463
Discovery Miles 4 630
Save R169 (27%)
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Ships in 9 - 15 working days
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Every night, at nine o’clock, wherever he is, Mr. Bianchi, an
accountant who often has to travel for work, calls his daughter and
tells her a bedtime story. But since it's still the 20th century
world of pay phones, each story has to be told in the time that a
single coin will buy. Reminiscent of Scheherazade and One Thousand
and One Nights, Gianni Rodari’s Telephone Tales is composed of
many stories––in fact, seventy short stories, with one for each
phone call. Each story is set in a different place and a different
time, with unconventional characters and a wonderful mix of reality
and fantasy. One night, it’s a carousel so beloved by children
that an old man finally sneaks on to understand why, and as he
sails above the world, he does. Or, it’s a land filled with
butter men, roads paved with chocolate, or a young shrimp who has
the courage to do things in a different way from what he's supposed
to do. Awarded the Hans Christian Anderson Award in 1970, Gianni
Rodari is widely considered to be Italy’s most important
children’s author of the 20th century. Newly re-illustrated by
Italian artist Valerio Vidali (The Forest), Telephone Tales
entertains, while questioning and imagining other worlds. Winner
of the 2021 Batchelder Award and the 2020 Italian Ministry of
Foreign Affairs’s English Translation Prize
A sparklingly funny cautionary tale about the perils of greed –
from a multi-award-winning picture book maker! Once, long ago,
there was a king. His kingdom was rich, his palace beautiful and
his army big and powerful. There was just one thing the king did
not have. A ship. But the king didn't want just any old ship. He
wanted a ship bigger, more powerful and full of beautiful treasures
than any ship that had ever been been… A sparklingly funny story
with a mischievous twist – perfect for fans of Jon Klassen, Peter
Brown and Emily Haworth Booth’s The King Who Banned the Dark.
From the multi-award-winning creator of The Forest and Jemmy
Button.
A gentle story about sadness showing that sometimes all you need to
feel better is the openness of someone who accepts you as you are.
A Financial Times Best Children's Book of 2021 This is a subtle
story about an elephant who is feeling sorrowful, and nothing seems
to interest him or lift his spirits. Illustrated with a striking
contrast between shadow and light, the moody blue elephant appears
to live in a different world from his colorful savanna friends.
Empathy is a tricky emotion for children and adults alike to grasp,
but The Shadow Elephant manages to walk the line between sadness,
understanding, and emotional connection. Here we witness, in a
story that unfolds at a natural, gentle pace, that it's okay to be
sad and to show it, and that this sorrow is not necessarily a
problem to be fixed, but is a feeling to acknowledge without
judgement. This simple act of acceptance and validating another
creature's feelings is subtle, yet, it is an essential step to true
empathy.
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Jemmy Button (Paperback)
Jennifer Uman; Valerio Vidali
1
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R246
R186
Discovery Miles 1 860
Save R60 (24%)
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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Inspired by the life of Jemmy Button - a native of Tierra del Fuego
who was brought to England in the mid-1800s to be 'educated' and
'civilised' by Captain Robert FitzRoy - this book illustrates
Jemmy's bizarre encounters and his return back home. Collaborating
across continents, without a common language, Valerio's precision
and Jennifer's primitive style have resulted in a story unlike any
other.
Do you want to know what life has in store? It's all here in this
book. All the little things we learn in the course of our lives. A
page a year, from nought to a hundred. 5: You learn that boys and
girls fall in love. Incredible! 13: When will your parents learn?
Not in front of your friends. 36: A dream came true, but it feels
different than you thought. 45: Do you like yourself as you are?
75: You learn to unlearn things. Can you still do a somersault? 86:
Everything can be different in every moment. How does our
perception of the world change in the course of a lifetime? When
Heike Faller's niece was born she began to wonder what we learn in
life, and how we can talk about what we have learnt with those we
love. And so she began to ask everyone she met, what did you learn
in life? Out of the answers of children's writers and refugees,
teenagers and artists, mothers and friends, came 99 lessons: that
those who have had a difficult time appreciate the good moments
more. That those who have had it easy find it harder getting old.
That a lot of getting old is about accepting boundaries. And of
course, as one 94 year old said to her, 'sometimes I feel like that
little girl I once was, and I wonder if I have learned anything at
all.' A bestseller in Germany, HUNDRED is a book given by children
to grandparents and the other way around, for christenings and
Mother's days, significant birthdays and times of celebration. With
every age beautifully illustrated by Valerio Vidali, Hundred cannot
simply be read because, like life itself, it must be experienced.
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