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Books with title The Great Pet Sale

  • Peter the Great

    Jacob Abbott

    eBook
    None
  • The Great Pet Sale

    Mick Inkpen

    Paperback (Hodder Childrens Book, July 31, 1999)
    Most young children fantasise about buying the contents of a pet shop and in the great pet sale all the animals must go: A platypus, terrapin and gecko are all at knock down prices. The koala and anteater are 9p the pair! A box of assorted brown things is only 20p. The little rat with the half his whiskers missing thinks he is the best bargin but just how many pets will the little boy be able to buy with his GBP1? A charming tale with a big pull out surprise at the end, this book is perfect for parents at bedtime or for numeracy hour in schools.
  • The Great Pet Sale

    Mick Inkpen

    Hardcover (Orchard Books, March 1, 1999)
    When a little boy goes to a sale at the pet store, a boisterous rat tries to convince the boy that he will be the perfect pet, but the little boy has a hard time choosing and wants to take all the adorable animals home.
    J
  • Peter the Great

    Diane Stanley

    Hardcover (HarperCollins, Aug. 25, 1986)
    In this welcome reissue of Diane Stanley's acclaimed picture book biography, her meticulously researched text and sumptuous illustrations capture the fabulous world of seventeenth—and eighteenth-century tsarist Russia and the greatness of its larger-than-life leader—a man of huge stature and tremendous spirit whose impatience and vision, insatiable curiosity and boundless energy transformed half a continent. This nonfiction picture book is an excellent choice to share during homeschooling, in particular for children ages 6 to 8. It’s a fun way to learn to read and as a supplement for activity books for children.Peter the Great, crowned tsar of Russia at the age of ten, believed that whatever he wanted he should have—and the sooner the better. What he wanted most was to bring his beloved country into the modem world. He traveled to the West to learn European ways—the first tsar ever to leave Russia—disguised as a common soldier.He explored the West with excitement and curiosity and returned home ready to undertake a series of momentous social reforms. And to satisfy his boyhood dream of a Russian naval port, he began to build, on a freezing swamp, a glittering new capital to be named St. Petersburg.
    P
  • The Great Pet Heist

    Emily Ecton, David Mottram

    Hardcover (Atheneum Books for Young Readers, June 2, 2020)
    Ocean’s Eleven meets The Secret Life of Pets in this hilarious and delightfully illustrated novel following a ragtag group of pets who will do whatever it takes to avoid being sent to the pound.Butterbean knew she wasn’t always a good dog. Still, she’d never considered herself a BAD dog—until the morning that her owner, Mrs. Food, fell in the hallway. Admittedly the tile was slipperier than usual, mostly because Butterbean had just thrown up on it. Now Butterbean and her fellow pets have to come up with a grand plan to support themselves in case Mrs. Food is unable to keep taking care of them. When they discover a mysterious man in their building who seems to have lots of loot, they plan a heist. Oscar the mynah bird is the brains of the operation. Walt the cat has the necessary slyness and slink. Marco and Polo are the reconnaissance rats. And Butterbean...well, no one would ever suspect a cute little wiener dog, right? Can these animal friends can pull off the heist of the century?
    S
  • The Great Pet Sale

    Mick Inkpen

    Paperback (Hodder Children's Books, July 1, 2006)
    Everything must go! said the sign on the pet shop window. A platypus, terrapin and gecko are all at knock down prices. The rat with half his whiskers missing thinks he's the best bargain but what is behind that door?
  • The Great Pet Sale

    Mick Inkpen

    Hardcover (Hodder Children's Books, March 15, 1998)
    The Great Pet Sale
  • Peter the Great

    Kathleen McDermott

    Library Binding (Chelsea House Pub, Sept. 1, 1990)
    A biography of the tsar who began the transformation of Russia into a modern state in the late seventeenth-early eighteenth centuries
    Y
  • The Great Pet Heist

    Emily Ecton, David Mottram

    eBook (Atheneum Books for Young Readers, June 2, 2020)
    Ocean’s Eleven meets The Secret Life of Pets in this hilarious and delightfully illustrated novel following a ragtag group of pets who will do whatever it takes to avoid being sent to the pound.Butterbean knew she wasn’t always a good dog. Still, she’d never considered herself a BAD dog—until the morning that her owner, Mrs. Food, fell in the hallway. Admittedly the tile was slipperier than usual, mostly because Butterbean had just thrown up on it. Now Butterbean and her fellow pets have to come up with a grand plan to support themselves in case Mrs. Food is unable to keep taking care of them. When they discover a mysterious man in their building who seems to have lots of loot, they plan a heist. Oscar the mynah bird is the brains of the operation. Walt the cat has the necessary slyness and slink. Marco and Polo are the reconnaissance rats. And Butterbean...well, no one would ever suspect a cute little wiener dog, right? Can these animal friends can pull off the heist of the century?
  • Peter the Great

    Diane Stanley

    Paperback (Aladdin, March 1, 1992)
    A biography of the tsar who began the transformation of Russia into a modern state in the last seventeenth - early eighteenth centuries.
    K
  • Peter the Great

    Jacob Abbott

    language (Serapis Classics, Oct. 17, 2017)
    The circumstances under which Peter the Great came to the throne form a very remarkable—indeed, in some respects, quite a romantic story. The name of his father, who reigned as Emperor of Russia from 1645 to 1676, was Alexis Michaelowitz. In the course of his life, this Emperor Alexis was twice married. By his first wife he had two sons, whose names were Theodore and John, and four daughters. The names of the daughters were Sophia, Catharine, Mary, and Sediassa. By his second wife he had two children—a son and a daughter. The name of the son was Peter, and that of the daughter was Natalia Alexowna. Of all these children, those with whom we have most to do are the two oldest sons, Theodore and John, and the oldest daughter, Sophia, by the first wife; and Peter, the oldest son by the second wife, the hero of this history. The name of the second wife, Peter's mother, was Natalia. Of course, Theodore, at his father's death, was heir to the throne. Next to him in the line of succession came John; and next after John came Peter, the son of the second wife; for, by the ancient laws and usages of the Muscovite monarchy, the daughters were excluded from the succession altogether. Indeed, not only were the daughters excluded themselves from the throne, but special precautions were taken to prevent their ever having sons to lay claim to it. They were forbidden to marry, and, in order to make it impossible that they should ever violate this rule, they were all placed in convents before they arrived at a marriageable age, and were compelled to pass their lives there in seclusion. Of course, the convents where these princesses were lodged were very richly and splendidly endowed, and the royal inmates enjoyed within the walls every comfort and luxury which could possibly be procured for them in such retreats, and which could tend in any measure to reconcile them to being forever debarred from all the pleasures of love and the sweets of domestic life...
  • The Great Garage Sale

    Marilyn Helmer, Mike Deas

    language (Orca Book Publishers, April 30, 2013)
    DJ mistakenly sells the wrong jewelry box to his friend at his grandma's garage sale and has to sacrifice his beloved skateboard to make things right.