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Books with title Little.com

  • Little.com

    Ralph Steadman

    Hardcover (David R. Godine, Publisher, May 19, 2016)
    Who would have guessed that the seemingly mild-mannered dot who holds our internet addresses together actually has a riotous secret life of its own? What is it, exactly, that it gets up to when we turn our computers off? Renowned illustrator Ralph Steadman is just the person to show us. In this madcap adventure, little Dot, setting off to take tea with its good friend the Duchess, happens to run afoul of the mustachioed Duke of Bogshott and his White Army . . . at which point things get seriously weird, with a plot involving terrifically epic battles, wedding invitations, downhill rollerblading, and inky socks. In Steadman’s silly, anarchic paintings, little Dot runs wild―and invites the reader along for the ride.
    L
  • Little.Com

    Ralph Steadman

    Hardcover (Andersen Press, Aug. 24, 2000)
    The very first picture book to address the most important component of our computer age . . . the dot!Meet the little dot that lives inside your computer. When you have switched it off, he takes the opportunity to visit his friend, the Duchess of Amalfi. He whizzes through cyber space to her place, for tea. Sometimes he is full of ink, and wobbly, and sometimes he isn’t. There are soldiers in white uniforms at the bottom of the hill, that he likes to cover in ink — and then he dances with them, because he is ashamed of himself. He’s pretty good at dancing — as long as he doesn’t wiggle he won’t make a single blot.From the Trade Paperback edition.
    V
  • Little.com

    Ralph Steadman

    Paperback (Andersen Press, Sept. 1, 2005)
    Meet the little dot that lives inside your computer. When you have switched it off, he takes the opportunity to visit his friend, the Duchess of Amalfi. He whizzes through cyberspace to her place for tea. Sometimes he is full of ink and wobbly, and sometimes he isn’t. There are soldiers in white uniforms at the bottom of the hill, that he likes to cover in ink—and then he dances with them, because he is ashamed of himself. He’s pretty good at dancing—as long as he doesn’t wiggle he won’t make a single blot. Ralph Steadman is the award-winning illustrator of both adult and children’s books, including That’s My Dad, The Grapes of Ralph, America, and No Room to Swing a Cat.
    K