At last a brand new Penny Pollard adventure! When Penny is given a school assignment about saints, she doesn t realise what she might be getting herself into Penny Pollard is one of Australia s most popular and enduring characters for children (and adults) everywhere. Written by award-winning and successful author, Robin Klein, and with amusing illustrations and photographs by Ann James, Penny Pollard s Scrapbook is guaranteed to join the ranks of the Penny Pollard classics, and delight a whole new generation of readers.
But she likes: horses, Mrs B (who is her 81-year-old best friend), collecting things (including horse shoes and swap cards), visiting cemeteries, and writing!You can read all about Penny s hilarious adventures in the six books that make up ...
This is the fourth book about Penny Pollard. The first, Penny Pollard's Diary, was recently serialized in Cricket Magazine, and the series has been hailed as "fast, easy, and entertaining reading" by School Library Journal.
But she likes: horses, Mrs B (who is her 81-year-old best friend), collecting things (including horse shoes and swap cards), visiting cemeteries, and writing!You can read all about Penny s hilarious adventures in the six books that make up ...
First published in 1988.
But she likes: horses, Mrs B (who is her 81-year-old best friend), collecting things (including horse shoes and swap cards), visiting cemeteries, and writing!You can read all about Penny s hilarious adventures in the six books that make up ...
Alison Ashley.
While on vacation at her Aunt Winifred's Penny's letters home reveal how she learns to stop hating babies and certain boys.
Written by award-winning and successful author, Robin Klein, and with amusing illustrations and photographs by Ann James, Penny Pollard s Scrapbook is guaranteed to join the ranks of the Penny Pollard classics, and delight a whole new ...
Red Dirt Diary is the hilarious tale of eleven-year-old tomboy Blue Weston, who lives with her family on a property outside Dubbo.
Like the glorious ghosts of the paintings in the Hermitage that lie at the heart of the story, Dean’s exquisite prose shimmers with a haunting glow, illuminating us to the notion that art itself is perhaps our most necessary nourishment.