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They have seven children, so life is hard, but they are a happy family PS 8: The Microbe Man: Eleanor Doorly: Robert Gibbings: 1943: A life of Louis Pasteur for children PS 9: The Puffin Puzzle Book: W. E. Gladstone: William Grimmond: 1944: The first Puffin Story Book to have an illustrated cover unique to itself. PS 10: Tents in Mongolia ...
This he expanded as The Flattered Flying Fish and Other Poems (1962). A selection of his verse appeared in A Puffin Quartet of Poets (1958). [5] For Rieu himself, his poems were a sideline, aimed mainly at children. [8] Rieu wrote the short story "Pudding Law: A Nightmare", included in The Great Book for Girls, published by Oxford University Press.
In 1996, Penguin Books published as a paperback A Complete Annotated Listing of Penguin Classics and Twentieth-Century Classics (ISBN 0-14-771090-1). This article covers editions in the series: black label (1970s), colour-coded spines (1980s), the most recent editions (2000s), and Little Clothbound Classics Series (2020s).
Penguin Problems is a Junior Library Guild book. [8] The Irish Times named it one of the best children's books of 2016, [9] and Bank Street College of Education included it on their 2017 list of the year's best children's books. [10]
Penguin Popular Classics, issued in 1994, are paperback editions of texts under the Classics imprints. They were created as a response to Wordsworth Classics , a series of very cheap reprints which imitated Penguin in using black as its signature colour. [ 1 ]
365 Penguins has generally received positive reviews.Kirkus Reviews called it "A comic episode equally suited to sharing with one child or a lunchroom full of children." [1] while Publishers Weekly found "Comical math problems and an ecological message form a memorable counterpoint in Fromental's story" [2] Inis magazine described it as "A feast for the mind, as well as for the eyes."
Mr. Popper's Penguins is a children's book written by Richard and Florence Atwater, with illustrations by Robert Lawson, originally published in 1938. It tells the story of a poor house painter named Mr. Popper and his family, who live in the small town of Stillwater in the 1930s.
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