Jack and the Beanstalk
- 30pages
- 2 heures de lecture
From acclaimed illustrator Ed Bryan, this magical retelling of the world's favourite fairy tale is perfect for sharing with the very young. This paperback edition includes a free audio reading.
Ed Bryan crée des mondes imaginaires, s'appuyant sur son expérience en design industriel et en art numérique. Il aborde son travail avec un esprit ludique, animé par le désir d'inventer et d'illustrer. Son parcours artistique a commencé dans une maison d'enfance remplie d'outils créatifs, influençant son style visuel unique. Les histoires de Bryan prennent vie grâce à des couleurs vibrantes et un sens aigu du design.






From acclaimed illustrator Ed Bryan, this magical retelling of the world's favourite fairy tale is perfect for sharing with the very young. This paperback edition includes a free audio reading.
The author of Ventura and Zelzah follows up that critically acclaimed debut novel with the further adventures of Douglas and his friends as they come of age in Southern California's San Fernando Valley in the late 1970s. Now seniors in high school, the gang spends their final year before college practicing stunt-driving in Marco's red Celica, getting high, obsessively listening to the great rock and roll of the era, and partying at the prom in powder blue tuxedos. Straddling youth and adulthood, Douglas is feeling the pressure to get serious about his future. He gets his first taste of office culture working for his dad, and enjoys writing for the school newspaper, but so much about his immediate future is still uncertain. Will he go to San Diego State University with his best friend, Hank, like they've always planned? Will his father finally stop pushing him to follow in his footsteps in sales and marketing, and support his budding interest in journalism? And what's going on with his new girlfriend Annie? She says she loves him, but her actions say otherwise, causing Douglas a great deal of teenage heartache. Like Ventura and Zelzah, with Ventura and Winnetka, J.G. Bryan has written a funny, poignant, and nostalgic coming-of-age tale about the relationships of teenagers on the verge of adulthood. The re-creation of the Valley culture of the late 1970s is palpable and magical.
Cinderella works hard to clean the house and look after her nasty stepsisters, but when the rest of the family go to a Royal Ball, Cinderella is left behind. That's when the fairy godmother arrives and works her magic - Cinderella will go to the ball after all Cinderella and the prince dance all night until midnight strikes, the magic stops working and Cinderella has to make a quick exit. Will the prince ever find her again?
The three little pigs leave home to make their way in the world. The first little pig builds a house made of straw. The second little pig builds a house made of sticks. And the third little pig builds a house made of bricks. But it's not long before the Big Bad Wolf turns up. He huffs and he puffs and he blows down the houses, one by one. But what will happen to the three little pigs?
From acclaimed illustrator Ed Bryan, this magical retelling of the world's favourite fairy tale is perfect for sharing with the very young.
When the three little pigs leave home to make their way in the world, they encounter a threatening Wolf.
This book, originally published in 1966, deals mainly with morphemes and with grammatical and syntactic behaviour. Although some vocabulary material is contained in this volume, and some more in the Linguistic Survey of the Northern Bantu Borderland, vocabulary comparison itself plays little part. The volume presents an overall picture of the working of representative languages from each section of the Handbook and provides grammatical material which will help future students in classifying the languages to their typological as apart from their lexical features.