Browse all books

Books with author William Murray

  • Read With Me #10 Magic Music

    William Murray

    Hardcover (Ladybird, Oct. 5, 1993)
    'Read With Me' adopts the look-say approach, introducing learners to the first 300 most frequently used words in the English language. Pronunciation and meaning are learned through gradual introduction and careful repitition.
    K
  • Read With Me #13 Lost In Pipers Park

    William Murray

    Hardcover (Ladybird, Oct. 5, 1993)
    None
    N
  • Read With Me #5 Kate And Crocodile

    William Murray

    Hardcover (Ladybird, Oct. 5, 1993)
    An easy reader, which is part of a series intended to cover the three main methods of teaching reading. Its publication coincides with the launch of the new phonic scheme "Say the Sounds" and has a simplified message to parents.
    J
  • Read With Me First Words Pre Reader

    William Murray

    Hardcover (Ladybird, Oct. 5, 1993)
    'Read With Me' adopts the 'look-say' approach, introducing learners to the first 300 most frequently used works in the English language. Pronunciation and meaning are learned through gradual introduction and careful repetition.
    N
  • Exiled To Siberia

    William Murray Graydon

    language (, April 12, 2010)
    An excerpt:It was November in Paris.The proverbial gloominess, however, was entirely lacking in the estimation of Colonel Hercules Hoffman, as he looked down on the gay and crowded boulevard from his apartment in the Hotel Bristol.Colonel Hoffman was a New Yorker, a man of wealth, position, and prominence, and in spite of the seductive attractions of the French capital, he was congratulating himself on the completion of the business that had taken him abroad and the prospect of a speedy return home.In Paris Colonel Hoffman was an atom, a mite; in New York he was--somebody.
  • Read With Me 06 Dream

    William Murray

    Hardcover (Ladybird, Oct. 5, 1993)
    'Read With Me' adopts the look-say approach, introducing learners to the first 300 most frequently used words in the English language. Pronunciation and meaning are learned through gradual introduction and careful repitition.
    K
  • Among The Pathans

    William Murray Graydon

    language (, April 16, 2010)
    An excerpt:When Jack Chetwynd dropped into the Bundar Cafe at Delhi one scorching afternoon in September of last year and informed me that we were ordered off to the Punjaub, I could have shouted for joy. I did not do it, though, for I well knew how scornfully Jack would regard any such demonstration. I merely nodded my head, lazily, and went on reading the Post with as much calmness as if such news was a mere every day affair."Yes, my boy," went on Jack, dropping into a chair and ordering a lemon squash, "we are going to have some fun. You know those rascally Pathans killed two or three of our fellows near the frontier station at Oghi some time ago, so an expedition is going up to give them a drubbing for it. It's a deuce of a country, they say, that Black Mountain region, and these Pathans are terrible fellows, too; fight like tigers. Plenty of chance for glory there, Charlie; so prepare yourself!"Jack stopped for breath, and buried his mustache in the icy goblet.
  • Among The Pathans

    William Murray Graydon

    language (, April 16, 2010)
    An excerpt:When Jack Chetwynd dropped into the Bundar Cafe at Delhi one scorching afternoon in September of last year and informed me that we were ordered off to the Punjaub, I could have shouted for joy. I did not do it, though, for I well knew how scornfully Jack would regard any such demonstration. I merely nodded my head, lazily, and went on reading the Post with as much calmness as if such news was a mere every day affair."Yes, my boy," went on Jack, dropping into a chair and ordering a lemon squash, "we are going to have some fun. You know those rascally Pathans killed two or three of our fellows near the frontier station at Oghi some time ago, so an expedition is going up to give them a drubbing for it. It's a deuce of a country, they say, that Black Mountain region, and these Pathans are terrible fellows, too; fight like tigers. Plenty of chance for glory there, Charlie; so prepare yourself!"Jack stopped for breath, and buried his mustache in the icy goblet.
  • Among The Pathans

    William Murray Graydon

    language (, April 16, 2010)
    An excerpt:When Jack Chetwynd dropped into the Bundar Cafe at Delhi one scorching afternoon in September of last year and informed me that we were ordered off to the Punjaub, I could have shouted for joy. I did not do it, though, for I well knew how scornfully Jack would regard any such demonstration. I merely nodded my head, lazily, and went on reading the Post with as much calmness as if such news was a mere every day affair."Yes, my boy," went on Jack, dropping into a chair and ordering a lemon squash, "we are going to have some fun. You know those rascally Pathans killed two or three of our fellows near the frontier station at Oghi some time ago, so an expedition is going up to give them a drubbing for it. It's a deuce of a country, they say, that Black Mountain region, and these Pathans are terrible fellows, too; fight like tigers. Plenty of chance for glory there, Charlie; so prepare yourself!"Jack stopped for breath, and buried his mustache in the icy goblet.
  • Among The Pathans

    William Murray Graydon

    language (, April 16, 2010)
    An excerpt:When Jack Chetwynd dropped into the Bundar Cafe at Delhi one scorching afternoon in September of last year and informed me that we were ordered off to the Punjaub, I could have shouted for joy. I did not do it, though, for I well knew how scornfully Jack would regard any such demonstration. I merely nodded my head, lazily, and went on reading the Post with as much calmness as if such news was a mere every day affair."Yes, my boy," went on Jack, dropping into a chair and ordering a lemon squash, "we are going to have some fun. You know those rascally Pathans killed two or three of our fellows near the frontier station at Oghi some time ago, so an expedition is going up to give them a drubbing for it. It's a deuce of a country, they say, that Black Mountain region, and these Pathans are terrible fellows, too; fight like tigers. Plenty of chance for glory there, Charlie; so prepare yourself!"Jack stopped for breath, and buried his mustache in the icy goblet.
  • Among The Pathans

    William Murray Graydon

    language (, April 16, 2010)
    An excerpt:When Jack Chetwynd dropped into the Bundar Cafe at Delhi one scorching afternoon in September of last year and informed me that we were ordered off to the Punjaub, I could have shouted for joy. I did not do it, though, for I well knew how scornfully Jack would regard any such demonstration. I merely nodded my head, lazily, and went on reading the Post with as much calmness as if such news was a mere every day affair."Yes, my boy," went on Jack, dropping into a chair and ordering a lemon squash, "we are going to have some fun. You know those rascally Pathans killed two or three of our fellows near the frontier station at Oghi some time ago, so an expedition is going up to give them a drubbing for it. It's a deuce of a country, they say, that Black Mountain region, and these Pathans are terrible fellows, too; fight like tigers. Plenty of chance for glory there, Charlie; so prepare yourself!"Jack stopped for breath, and buried his mustache in the icy goblet.
  • Among The Pathans

    William Murray Graydon

    language (, April 16, 2010)
    An excerpt:When Jack Chetwynd dropped into the Bundar Cafe at Delhi one scorching afternoon in September of last year and informed me that we were ordered off to the Punjaub, I could have shouted for joy. I did not do it, though, for I well knew how scornfully Jack would regard any such demonstration. I merely nodded my head, lazily, and went on reading the Post with as much calmness as if such news was a mere every day affair."Yes, my boy," went on Jack, dropping into a chair and ordering a lemon squash, "we are going to have some fun. You know those rascally Pathans killed two or three of our fellows near the frontier station at Oghi some time ago, so an expedition is going up to give them a drubbing for it. It's a deuce of a country, they say, that Black Mountain region, and these Pathans are terrible fellows, too; fight like tigers. Plenty of chance for glory there, Charlie; so prepare yourself!"Jack stopped for breath, and buried his mustache in the icy goblet.