: The perfect first picture board book for your child to learn about colours. Well researched pictures will help your baby to identify colours, build vocabulary and improve observation skills.
: A couple of years after his father's death, ten-year-old Ruskin travels to Dehradun to spend his holidays with his new family. As he reacquaints himself with his mother, now remarried and with a busy social life, his stepfather and new siblings, a pensive Ruskin longs for his father's company, his stamp collection and the old gramophone. Trying to escape this unfamiliar place, he immerses himself in books and explores the forest glades, canals and bazaars of the little town, forming some unlikely friendships on the way. After the much-loved Looking for the Rainbow, the master storyteller lends another backward glance at his boyhood years-a vacation that took place over seventy winters ago-remembering his days with rare humour, remarkable charm and twinges of heartache.
: A brilliant book to introduce little ones to the wonders of science, from the human body, weather and seasons to forces, space, animals and plants. With simple text, charming illustrations and Usborne Quicklinks to specially selected websites with easy science experiments and online activities.
: There is a frog in the classroom, warn the students. A frog is eating up masterjis lunch. A frog is sitting on masterjis chair. But masterji is not going to fall for his students pranks today.
: Usborne Illustrated Stories for Christmas (No:7920)
: Usborne
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: Charmingly illustrated stories for Christmas that take young readers to the Snow Queen's palace, riding on Santa's sleigh and wandering through Victorian London with the Ghost of Christmas Past, among other magical places.
: Indian author Ruskin Bond's short stories have been charming generations of children for over six decades now, and the mature readers haven't remained unglued either. Three such literary gems by the country's 3rd-highest civilian awardee-the zigzag walk, the wind on haunted Hill, and wild fruit-have been carefully encased in the book adventure stories for children. Aside from humour, horror, and present-past flights, the inside illustrations are sure to provide the reader with an impactful vision of the setting and characters.
: ndian author Ruskin Bond's short stories have been charming generations of children for over six decades now, and the mature readers haven't remained unglued either. Three such literary gems by the country's 3rd-highest civilian awardee-the regimental myna, tiger My friend, and monkey trouble-have been carefully encased in the book animal stories for children. Each caters an unusual human-animal bond, while the inside illustrations are sure to provide the reader with an impactful vision of the setting and characters.
: Indian author Ruskin Bond's short stories have been charming generations of children for over six decades now, and the mature readers haven't remained unglued either. Three such literary gems by the country's 3rd-highest civilian awardee goodbye, Miss Mackenzie, Rome and the wildfire; and the kitemaker-have been carefully encased in the book magical stories for children. Told from the quaint hills and valleys and old Delhi of pre-Independence India, The inside illustrations are sure to provide the reader with an impactful vision of the setting and characters.
: Indian author Ruskin Bond's short stories have been charming generations of children for over six decades now, and the mature readers haven't remained unglued either. Three such literary gems by the country's 3rd-highest civilian awardee-the tunnel, gone fishing, and an island of trees-have been carefully encased in the book amazing stories for children. Aside from mystery, thriller, and mind-bending twists, the inside illustrations are sure to provide the reader with an impactful vision of the setting and characters.
: She was there every morning, chasing butterflies, stalking squirrels and mynahs, her voice brimming with laughter, her slight figure flitting about between the trees.’ Childhood memories are cherished by everybody. They are a reminder of a simpler time, a time when we easily appreciated the mundane, when excitement and joy were aplenty and when little caused us worry or even fear. Every experience of childhood is unique and special and only as adults do we realize how little we let come in our way to fully enjoying life in those days of unbothered pleasure.