Receta para una catástrofe: Mezcla 4 fiestas apetitosas. Añade 2 amigas y plamea con 1 flechazo. Enfríalo todo con la chica que está dispuesta a fastidiarte... ¡Remueve bien, cierra los ojos y desea que te trague la tierra!
Pantanos llenos de peligros, criaderos de dragones foreces, orcos despiadados, voces misteriosas que parecen traídas por el viento... A todo esto deberá enfrentarse el joven elfo Audaz en su largo camino hacia el Reino de las Brujas. Pero también establecerá alianzas inimaginables para luchar sin fin contra el poder de las tinieblas...
El camino de Nikki hacia el estrellato: Enfrentamiento con la diva de turno, Bronca con la mejores amigas, Apoyo de personal altamente competente VIP (Popstar muy importante).
As topical today as when it was first published in 1938, The 500 Hats of Bartholomew Cubbins is the story of a young boy (the same one featured in the Caldecott Honor Award-winner Bartholomew and the Oobleck) and his unjust treatment at the hands of a king. Written in unrhymed prose, The 500 Hats is one of Dr. Seuss’s earliest works, and while it may not be as well-known as his other stories, the book addresses subjects that we know the good doctor was passionate about throughout his life: the abuse of power (as in Yertle the Turtle and Horton Hears a Who); rivalry (as in The Sneetches); and of course, zany good humor (as in The Cat in the Hat and all the other books he wrote and illustrated)!
A yawn is quite catching, you see. Like a cough.
It just takes one yawn to start other yawns off.
Dr. Seuss spins a sleep-tastic tale about a very small bug and a very big yawn that spreads and spreads. Meanwhile, the Audio-Telly-o-Tally-o Count adds up every sleeping creature from the country of Keck to the Castle of Krupp. First one, then seven, all the way to the billions and zillions, the Who's-Asleep-Count just keeps growing and growing! This book is a perfect bedtime story that will have the most reluctant readers laughing, and the most reluctant sleepers snoring!
Eyes, ears, teeth, noses, feet, knees--practically every living thing has got them--and their variations are fascinating, especially to young children. And now, consumers of all ages can indulge their curiosity about these beguiling body parts with six classic Beginner Books--The Foot Book, The Eye Book, and The Tooth Book by Dr. Seuss, The Nose Book and The Ear Book by Al Perkins, and The Knee Book by Graham Tether--for less than the price of two! A perfect gift for holidays and happy occaisions of all kinds, My Big Book of Beginner Books About Me is not only a great value, it's a great "body" of work!