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Books : Children's Books : Obsessions : TV : Charlie & Lola
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A new edition with 15 novelty scenes! Bedtime balkers will laugh at Lola's
antics — while grown-ups offer a silent cheer for her savvy brother.
Night owl Lola likes to stay up coloring and scribbling and wriggling and bouncing and chattering. Lola never gets tired. How can her patient big brother, Charlie, convince her it's time for bed? Lauren Child splashes her offbeat humor and unique artwork all over this bedtime story, now in a delightful edition filled with pop-up surprises. -
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Charlie and Lola are due to get their hair cut but Lola is determined that hers is fine just the way it is. The fact that she can't see properly or play or do her ballet doesn't seem to worry her and Charlie can't understand why she won't get her hair cut. Eventually he works out that it's because her hair is so tangled and knotty and she hates having it combed. So Charlie, in his loving and caring big brother way, manages to coax out the tangles and Lola emerges looking like a princess. With six scenes based on an episode from the Charlie and Lola BBC TV animation series, three pages of fabulous reusable stickers allow children to create, adapt and invent their very own Charlie and Lola adventure.
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Lola and her ever-patient brother get clear on some concepts in a wryly instructive board book for the younger set.
Everyone knows that Lola has one brother, Charlie. But open this whimsical counting book to learn that she also has two toothbrushes (one for her and one for her lion friend), four moon squirters (which look a lot like tomatoes), and a very active imagination. -
Lola and her ever-patient brother get clear on some concepts in a wryly instructive board book for the younger set.
Lola says, "I am absolutely not big. I am still really quite small." But what is the difference between Lola’s big brother, Charlie, and a small red ladybug, a full glass of strawberry milk -- and the same glass after a tiger gets its paws on it? -
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This digital document is an article from Childhood Education, published by Thomson Gale on August 15, 2005. The length of the article is 3610 words. The page length shown above is based on a typical 300-word page. The article is delivered in HTML format and is available in your Amazon.com Digital Locker immediately after purchase. You can view it with any web browser.
Citation Details
Title: Mother Earth's Children's Charter School in Canada: imagining a new story of school.
Author: Marni Pearce
Publication: Childhood Education (Magazine/Journal)
Date: August 15, 2005
Publisher: Thomson Gale
Volume: 81 Issue: 6 Page: 343(6)
Distributed by Thomson Gale
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