Plus d’un million de livres à portée de main !
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Helena Clare Pittman

    Helena Clare Pittman est une artiste dont le parcours créatif a débuté dans sa jeunesse. Sa formation approfondie comprend une Licence en Beaux-Arts en Peinture du Pratt Institute et un Master en Arts de l'Antioch University. Pittman a consacré sa carrière aux arts visuels et à l'éducation, enseignant un éventail de sujets incluant la couleur, l'illustration et le design dans des institutions prestigieuses. Son œuvre, profondément ancrée dans l'expression artistique, a abouti à la publication de dix-sept livres pour enfants, démontrant son talent unique d'auteur et d'illustratrice.

    Grain of Rice
    The House
    • The House

      • 312pages
      • 11 heures de lecture
      4,5(25)Évaluer

      The definitive account of the human story behind the building of the Sydney Opera House.

      The House
    • Grain of Rice

      • 112pages
      • 4 heures de lecture
      4,0(41)Évaluer

      Over 200,000 copies sold! Now with a newly refreshed design, this classic mathematical folktale tells the story of a clever farmer who outwits the Emperor of China and becomes the wealthiest man in the world—all starting with one grain of rice. When a humble farmer named Pong Lo asks for the hand of the Emperor’s beautiful daughter, the Emperor is enraged. Whoever heard of a peasant marrying a princess? But Pong Lo is wiser than the Emperor knows. And when he concocts a potion that saves the Princess’s life, the Emperor gladly offers him any reward he chooses—except the Princess. Pong Lo makes a surprising request. He asks for a single grain of rice, doubled every day for one hundred days. The baffled Emperor obliges—only to discover that if you’re as clever as Pong Lo, you can turn a single grain of rice into all the wealth and happiness in the world! A Bank Street Best Book of the Year for 9 to 12 Praise for A Grain of Rice: “Gracefully illustrated. . . . This original story set in fifteenth-century China will captivate readers and perhaps teach them a little about mathematics.” —Booklist “Clever and quietly told in simple, yet evocative language.” —Kirkus Reviews “Any young reader (with calculator handy) will enjoy the tale.” —Scientific American “[A] book that is wise and humorous, and one to be perused and savored.” —School Library Journal

      Grain of Rice