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Books with author Michelle Bates

  • The Fairy That Didn't Believe In Girls.

    Michelle Barber

    eBook
    A fairy who does not believe in girls, a pippin who wants to kick ass and a brownie who taught Lady Macbeth about being sweet are all ingredients that will demand a young girl’s attention. Sprinkle in that the fairy cannot fly and is also in danger of losing everything and pages will turn.Dragged out of bed on the first morning at her new job by Buxom Bertha Brownie, Fairy Luna is threatened with losing her home and occupation because a giant shoe has been left on the pathway of the Lost Property Shop where she works. Bertha is off to an important meeting but if the shoe has not been ticketed and placed in the shop by the time she returns, Luna will be out for good.‘The Fairy That Did Not Believe in Girls’ is a comedy adventure story aimed at girls aged 7 – 11. With constant conflict and humour to keep the reader turning the page, the book invites children to explore loss while making it a fun and exciting experience. Scenes include:•Flying to the marshes to get something from Professor Topple (Luna’s Dad) to sort the hound out in Carlotta, Mrs Topple’s (Luna’s Mum) invention.•Getting an ointment off Professor Topple that will make the hound think that Luna is a cat and so will obediently follow her wherever she wants it to go.•Finding a silver whistle on the ground when Carlotta disappears. A sprite tells them that the goblins have stolen Carlotta. •Being arrested in Goblin Grove and flung in front of Grim Gordon, the goblin king.•Escaping from Goblin Grove with a band of furious goblins after their blood.•Thinking it is the end as she lies in the jaws of the dog.•Quarrelling with the giant.•Choosing being savaged by a dog or believing in girls.•Moving the shoe.•The ground shaking as the builders move into Chancey Woodland Gardens as they renovate the house into a school for girls.
  • Riding Holiday

    Michelle Bates

    Paperback (Usborne Publishing Ltd, March 15, 1650)
    None
  • Horse in Danger

    Mitchelle Bates

    Hardcover (Usborne Publishing Ltd, May 29, 1998)
    None
  • Horse in Danger

    Michelle Bates

    Paperback (Usborne Publishing Ltd, March 15, 1717)
    None
  • Horse in Danger

    Michelle Bates

    Paperback (Usborne Pub Ltd, March 15, 1869)
    None
  • The Fairy That Didn't Believe In Girls.

    Michelle Barber

    Paperback (Independently published, June 13, 2018)
    A fairy who does not believe in girls, a pippin who wants to kick ass and a brownie who taught Lady Macbeth about being sweet are all ingredients that will demand a young girl’s attention. Sprinkle in that the fairy cannot fly and is also in danger of losing everything and pages will turn. Dragged out of bed on the first morning at her new job by Buxom Bertha Brownie, Fairy Luna is threatened with losing her home and occupation because a giant shoe has been left on the pathway of the Lost Property Shop where she works. Bertha is off to an important meeting but if the shoe has not been ticketed and placed in the shop by the time she returns, Luna will be out for good. ‘The Fairy That Did Not Believe in Girls’ is a comedy adventure story aimed at girls aged 7 – 11. With constant conflict and humour to keep the reader turning the page, the book invites children to explore loss while making it a fun and exciting experience. Scenes include: • Flying to the marshes to get something from Professor Topple (Luna’s Dad) to sort the hound out in Carlotta, Mrs Topple’s (Luna’s Mum) invention. • Getting an ointment off Professor Topple that will make the hound think that Luna is a cat and so will obediently follow her wherever she wants it to go. • Finding a silver whistle on the ground when Carlotta disappears. A sprite tells them that the goblins have stolen Carlotta. • Being arrested in Goblin Grove and flung in front of Grim Gordon, the goblin king. • Escaping from Goblin Grove with a band of furious goblins after their blood. • Thinking it is the end as she lies in the jaws of the dog. • Quarrelling with the giant. • Choosing being savaged by a dog or believing in girls. • Moving the shoe. • The ground shaking as the builders move into Chancey Woodland Gardens as they renovate the house into a school for girls.
  • The Midnight Horse

    bates-michelle

    Paperback (Usborne Publishing Ltd, Jan. 1, 2009)
    Midnight Horse
  • Horse in Danger

    Michelle Bates

    Paperback (Edc Pub, March 15, 1844)
    None
  • What Are We?

    Michelle Estes

    Paperback (Christian Faith Publishing, Inc, June 9, 2020)
    Grace Standifer seems to be a normal six year old little girl that is full of questions about life. She loves to spend the day playing dress up with her friends, having lunch with her grandmother, and then curling up in her daddy's lap as he reads the evening paper. But one day her questions changed from "why" to "what," causing her and her parents to look at their life differently. Come join us as we go through that day when everything changed for Grace and her parents as she asked, "What are we?"
  • Help! There's a Spider in My Bed.

    Michelle Barber

    eBook (, June 22, 2017)
    Fiona sees a huge hairy spider in Freddie's room but he is too busy writing to listen. When Superhero Stan turns up to deal with the spider situation, we discover this is a spider with his own agenda. How to use this picture book. For young children that are learning to speak or children that have English as a second language, you can use it to teach the keywords - door, wall, light, curtains, floor, table and bed. For children that are learning to read you can use it to teach them to read the same keywords and hold them to memory, this works very well if used in conjunction to phonics. It can also be used to develop the child's reading skills because there are repeated phrases that help with intonation. The spider has a mischievous laugh "Ha Ha Ha" which your child can enjoy reproducing while Freddie repeats "Not now, Fiona" in a distracted, bored or irritated way. Your child can experiment with how Freddie is feeling. This is a book that your child will enjoy reading again and again whilst learning at the same time.