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Books with title The Rainbow Fish Bath Book

  • Rainbow Fish to the Rescue! Big Book

    Marcus Pfister

    Paperback (North-South Books, Sept. 1, 1997)
    The sequel to the phenomenal bestseller The Rainbow Fish is now available in a spectacular big book edition.
    M
  • Rainbow Fish Big Book

    Marcus Pfister

    Paperback (North-South Books, April 1, 1995)
    Rainbow Fish finds friendship and happiness when he learns to share.
    M
  • The Rainbow Fish

    Marcus Pfister, J. Alison James, Chen-T Ang Kuo

    Hardcover (Pan Asian Pubns, Nov. 1, 1995)
    None
    M
  • The Rainbow Fairy Book

    Andrew Lang

    Paperback (Dover Publications, June 5, 2007)
    The best single-volume collection of favorite fairy tales from Lang's famous series of fairy tale books in many colors. Included are 31 best-loved stories: "Hansel and Gretel," "Rapunzel," "Jack and the Beanstalk," "The Prince and the Dragon," "Rumpelstiltskin," and "The Three Little Pigs."
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  • My Rainbow Fish Book Box My Rainbow Fish Book Box

    Marcus Pfister

    Hardcover (Northsouth, Oct. 28, 2011)
    None
  • Rainbow Fish and the Whale Tuff Book

    Marcus Pfister

    Hardcover (NorthSouth, April 1, 2011)
    Rainbow Fish makes a new friend!Take these rough and tumble tiny books wherever you go! Tuff Books are tear-resistant, easy to clean, and completely safety tested and approved for tiny tuff readers!
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  • Rainbow Fish to the Rescue! Mini Book

    Marcus Pfister

    Hardcover (North-South Books, Aug. 16, 2001)
    HARDCOVER
  • The Rainbow Fish Bath Book by Marcus Pfister

    Marcus Pfister

    Bath Book (North-South Books, Aug. 16, 1701)
    None
  • The Rainbow Book:

    Mabel Henriette Spielmann, Arthur Rackham

    eBook (E-Kitap Projesi & Cheapest Books, March 28, 2019)
    It's all very well—but you, and I, and most of us who are healthy in mind and blithe of spirit, love to give rein to our fun and fancy, and to mingle fun with our fancy and fancy with our fun.The little Fairy-people are the favourite children of Fancy, and were born into this serious world ages and ages ago to help brighten it, and make it more graceful and dainty and prettily romantic than it was. They found the Folk-lore people already here—grave, learned people whose learning was all topsy-turvy, for it dealt with toads, and storms, and diseases, and what strange things would happen if you mixed them up together, and how the devil would flee if you did something with a herb, and how the tempest would stop suddenly, as Terence records, if you sprinkled a few drops of vinegar in front of it. No doubt, since then thousands of people have sprinkled tens of thousands of gallons of good vinegar before advancing tempests, and although tempests pay far less attention to the liquid than the troubled waters to a pint of oil, the sprinklers and their descendants have gone on believing with a touching faith. It is pretty, but not practical.But what is pretty and practical too, is that all of us should sometimes let our fancy roam, and that we should laugh as well, even over a Fairy-story. Yet there are some serious-minded persons, very grave and very clever, who get angry if a smile so much as creeps into a Fairy-tale, and if our wonder should be disturbed by anything so worldly as a laugh. A Fairy-tale, they say, should be like an old Folk-tale, marked by sincerity and simplicity—as if humour cannot be sincere and simple too."The true Fairy-story is not comic." Why not? Of this we may be sure—take all the true humourless Fairy-stories and take "Alice"—and "Alice" with its fun and fancy will live beside them as long as English stories are read, loved for its fancy and its fun, and hugged and treasured for its jokes and its laughter. The one objection is this: the "true Fairy-story" appeals to all children, young and old, in all lands, equally, by translation; and jokes and fun are sometimes difficult to translate. But that is on account of the shortcomings of language, and it is hard to make young readers suffer by starving them of fun, because the power of words is less absolute than the power of fancy in its merrier mood.
  • The Rainbow Fish to the Rescue Tuff Book

    Marcus Pfister

    Hardcover (North-South Books, March 15, 1600)
    None
  • Rainbow Fish Bath Towel

    Marcus Pfister

    Hardcover (North-South, Sept. 1, 1998)
    None
  • The Rainbow Fish Puzzle Book

    Marcus Pfister

    Board book (NorthSouth, Aug. 16, 1773)
    None