: The latest edition in the wonderful Butterfingers series Smash It, Butterfingers! shows Khyrunnisa at her entertaining best. Having launched (and enjoyed) every one of his previous adventures, I was delighted to follow Amar's latest exploits, this time in a tale about badminton. An amusing, charming, rollicking children's story-and for adults too, for whom it should bring back glorious memories of the joy and trepidation of school sports tournaments.
: Geronimo Stilton #43: I'm Not a Super Mouse! (No:7895)
: Geronimo Stilton
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: Geronimo has always been a 'fraidy mouse, and his super-sporty friend Bruce Hyena decides that he needs to help Geronimo learn to keep calm in extreme situations. Bruce puts Geronimo to the test through encounters with scary animals and weather in conditions ranging from the desert to the North Pole. After Bruce's crazy training, a natural weather disaster occurs on Mouse Island. Will Geronimo prove that he truly is a super mouse?
: Diary of a Wimpy Kid # 2 - Rodrick Rules (No:7393)
: Jeff Kinney
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: The highly anticipated sequel to the #1 "NEW YORK TIMES" bestselling book Secrets have a way of getting out, especially when a diary is involved. Whatever you do, don't ask Greg Heffley how he spent his summer vacation, because he definitely doesn't want to talk about it. As Greg enters the new school year, he's eager to put the past three months behind him . . . and one event in particular. Unfortunately for Greg, his older brother, Rodrick, knows all about the incident Greg wants to keep under wraps. But secrets have a way of getting out . .
: Mouse Sees the World - What Animals Eat (No:7394)
: Kuntie Ramdat Balkaran
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: An adventurous mouse sets out to discover the world, on the way, he meets a frog, a butterfly and many other creatures. But none of them will go with them. Finally, he meets a cat... will the mouse become the cat's food ?
This delightfully illustrated book teaches children what different animals, birds and insects eat and how they go about finding their food.
: Boggis is an enormously fat chicken farmer who only eats boiled chickens smothered in fat.
Bunce is a duck-and-goose farmer whose dinner gives him a beastly temper.
Bean is a turkey-and-apple farmer who only drinks gallons of strong cider.
Mr Fox is so clever that every evening he creeps down into the valley and helps himself to food from their farms - and those GHASTLY farmers can't catch him!
: Magic Tree House # 3 Mummies in the Morning (No:15352)
: Mary Pope Osborne
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: Jack and Annie don't need another mummy. But that's what they get when the Magic Tree House whisks them back to ancient Egypt. There they meet a long-dead queen who needs their help. Will Jack and Annie be able to solve the puzzle, or will they end up as mummies themselves?
Did you know that there’s a Magic Tree House book for every kid?
: Magic Tree House # 4 Pirates Past Noon (No:15353)
: Mary Pope Osborne
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: It's a treasure trove of trouble! Jack and Annie are in for a high-seas adventure when the Magic Tree House whisks them back to the days of deserted islands, secret maps—and ruthless pirates! Will they discover a buried treasure? Or will they be forced to walk the plank?
Did you know that there’s a Magic Tree House book for every kid?
: The Holocaust was one of the most horrendous and terrible eras in history. Innumerable books have been written describing the horrors of the Holocaust; but nothing beats the documentation of a family who had gone into hiding in the diary of a little girl, Anne Frank. Honest, lucid and empathetic; The Diary of A Young Girl deserves a read by everyone who has ever questioned mental strength of humans and also by those who cannot come to terms with the cruelties that could be inflicted by humans upon fellow humans. The first entry in the diary is on June 12, 1942 by Anne Frank, who had received it as a birthday present and the entries in the diary end abruptly on 1 August, 1944.
: The unforgettable novel of a childhood in a sleepy Southern town and the crisis of conscience that rocked it, To Kill A Mockingbird became both an instant bestseller and a critical success when it was first published in 1960. It went on to win the Pulitzer Prize in 1961 and was later made into an Academy Award-winning film, also a classic.