0

New
Cover, zwei Hasen treffen einen Dachs beim Essen
Cover, zwei Hasen treffen einen Dachs beim Essen
Innenillustration, ein Hase und seine Freunde bei der Gartenarbeit
Innenillustration, Waldtiere beim Laternenumzug
Cover, zwei Hasen treffen einen Dachs beim Essen
Cover, eine Maus und ein Eichhörnchen beim Picknick

The Small Colourful Buggy World - Mouse's Most Wonderful Year & Hare's Most Wonderful Day

The new favourite companion on the go for the youngest of readers.

Take a look at what Hare, Mouse, and their friends do throughout a day and the year. And look, tractor Leonard is helping the harvester and visits the cows on their pasture. And here, the bee is collecting nectar on the meadow and the horse and the sheep are racing each other! And there’s the rabbit in the garden and the clownfish in the ocean, the cow at the farm and the fox in the woods, the plane in the sky and the excavator at the construction site, the tiger in the jungle and the elephants in the savannah, and the foals on the pasture and the fire engine on the road!


These buggy books with colourful illustrations provide many motifs on all-time favourite subjects such as meadow and farm animals, garden and ocean, farm and forest, vehicles and construction site, jungle and savannah, baby animals and service vehicles, everyday life and seasons, and lovable character Leonard to marvel at.


With the band included in each bundle, the books are easily fastened to the buggy to be always close at hand.

Category:
Board Book
Type:
Board book
Pages:
12
Publication Date:
Dimensions:
11,0 x 11,0 cm
ISBN:
978-3-7348-1634-5

Download

Further Titles in the Series

Creative People

Author

Norman Klaar was born in the beautiful Rhineland in-between the then capital city Bonn and the cathedral city Cologne in 1980. Today, he writes books for children and tries teaching himself how to draw.


Illustrator

Sébastien Braun was born in Strasbourg, the hometown of Gustave Doré and Tomi Ungerer (his heroes). As a child he spent countless hours drawing, but at secondary school there were no art classes, so he filled his homework with doodles and portraits of his teachers. At university he initially studied history – fortunately, the building was shared with the art department, and when he saw the students sketching, knew he had to change. After that, he spent a few years teaching applied art to sixth formers, before taking the plunge as a freelance illustrator. His first commissions were for magazines in Paris, and when he moved to London, he developed his portfolio for children’s books.