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Madagascar

Madagascar (55)

with children’s storybook Ranjit's Rainbow Tigers by Tracy Kewley

with illustrations by Jessica Knight

The topic of Traders opens up an exotic world, rich in stories, ideas and exploration and our story Ranjit’s Rainbow Tigers, leads the way.

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Books

Books (155)

with children’s storybook Ranjit's Rainbow Tigers by Tracy Kewley

with illustrations by Jessica Knight

The topic of Traders opens up an exotic world, rich in stories, ideas and exploration and our story Ranjit’s Rainbow Tigers, leads the way.

View items...

The Tale of Despereaux

by Kate DiCamillo (Candlewick Press)

A new old-fashioned fairytale.

Songs and verse

by Roald Dahl (Puffin)

This is a great, subversive, hilarious, clever book.

Harvey Slumfenburger's Christmas Present

by John Burningham (Walker)

A perfect festive read.

The Book With No Pictures

by BJ Novak (Puffin)

This book with no pictures needs no words!

Nothing

by Mick Inkpen (Hodder)

This sweet, sweet tale will tug at your heart strings but don’t hold that against it. It’s a beautiful story, you will love it.

Duck in the Truck

by Jez Alborough (HarperCollins)

More rhyming with this classic that’s great to read aloud.

 

Each Peach Pear Plum

by Allan and Janet Ahlberg (Puffin)

This is really the perfect book for reading to pre-schoolers. The pictures offer lots of opportunities for guessing what comes next and the introduction of familiar characters gives lots of opportunity to springboard into other books.

The Runaway Dinner

by Allan Ahlberg and Bruce Ingman (Walker)

The Runaway Dinner has the most wonderful lyrical written style to it. Coupled with Bruce’s artwork which is quite child-like but utterly perfectly suited to the story, it’s a bit of an overlooked classic but so brilliant.

The Queen’s Knickers

by Nicholas Allan (Red Fox)

Fun, irreverent and cheeky – this and Cinderella’s Bum still make us laugh out loud (we only have to hear the name Dilys and we’re in fits of laughter). Books that make you guffaw and grin are always winners.

Troll and the Oliver

by Adam Stower (Templar)

I love children’s books that throw the rulebook away. There’s a fabulous twist to this tale that pops up three quarters of the way through that made Charlotte gasp. I can still picture her expression and we still love reading this, even now she’s older and loves chapter book stuff more than picture books.

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