Children's picture books

  • Sammy Feels Shy

    £7.99

    Sammy LOVES having fun! But he doesn’t love talking in front of other people. A book about tackling shyness, from the bestselling creator of the Big Bright Feelings series

  • The Dangerous Pet Lover’s Guide to Dragons

    £12.99

    Dragons are well known for being sulky and difficult. However, by following these simple but important guidelines, you might just create a lovable and (almost) friendly pet. ‘The Dangerous Pet Lover’s Guide to Dragons’ is the essential dragon-care manual you didn’t know you needed. Full of useful tips, tricks and advice on everything from feeding and housing your dragon to grooming and washing it (top tip: DON’T EVEN TRY), this handy guidebook will equip you with everything you need to bond with your new pet!

  • Animal Music

    £7.99

    A raucous read-aloud rhyme for toddlers, part of Julia Donaldson’s Toddler Time range and illustrated by bestselling Nick Sharratt.

  • Everyday Bean (Tiny Bean’s Big Adventures, Book #1)

    £16.99

    Join adorable hedgehog Bean in the first picture book of a new series full of tiny stories about big everyday adventures that will warm quills – and tickle funny bones! Meet Bean, a very tiny hedgehog. She loves ghosts, swings and a stuffie called Clem. Meet Bean’s grandma. She loves strawberries, sweaters and tiny Bean burritos. And they both love stories. In ten tiny stories we follow Bean and her grandmother through adventures of the everyday. Bean loses her bad mood in a meadow and Grandma thinks she sees a ghost (don’t worry it’s just Bean!) – and there’s even a story with giant strawberries. This first volume in the Tiny Bean’s Big Adventures series by acclaimed author/illustrator and hedgehog friend/insider, Stephanie Graegin, is the perfect gift for little (and big) readers and hedgehog admirers everywhere.

  • Peter Rabbit Goes to London

    £7.99

    Peter Rabbit had heard wonderful stories about the faraway place called London, but it’s not at all what he’s used to – cobbled roads, big red buses and buildings that reach as high as the sky! Join Peter and his friends in this lift-the-flap adventure, full of London sights and famous landmarks including St Paul’s Cathedral, Big Ben, Houses of Parliament, Tower of London, Tower Bridge, Buckingham Palace and Covent Garden Market.

  • Thoughts From a Quiet Bench

    £12.99

    The Quiet Bench in the playground is the perfect place to sit and watch the world go by. It’s a place to listen, think, and ask yourself questions such as: What are thoughts made of? Where does the air stop being invisible and turn into blue sky? Can the wind blow in two different directions at once? So next time you see someone sitting quietly, why not join them? Because there’s always room for one more friend on the Quiet Bench.

  • Duck Delivers

    £7.99

    Duck is a home bird. He likes splashing in the bath, eating bread in bed, and organising his sock collection. Yet, there comes a time when even the most unadventurous birds must fly the nest. And what better way to see the world, than as a Delivery Duck for Feather Force! Soon, with his uniform, parcel and STRICT instructions from Osstrich Bosstrich, Duck is scooting off on his very first adventure – what could go possibly wrong?

  • Aisha’s Colours

    £7.99

    What is Aisha’s favourite colour? Is it white like delicious Es Campur ice? Blue like the ocean? Or maybe it’s all the colours, like the beautiful rainbow kites soaring in the sky? Aisha envies her friend’s holidays in faraway places – holidays with white snow, blue swimming pools and rainbow fish. But as Aisha and her parents drive to Grandma’s house through the spectacular Indonesian countryside, Aisha opens her eyes to the wonderful colours just outside her window – white, blue, rainbow and more – and, ultimately, she realizes: being together with her family is what makes her summer special.

  • The Riding Lesson

    £8.99

    Frances adores horses and knows everything about them – at least she thinks she does. But when she arrives at her friend Mae’s house for her first horseback-riding lesson sporting a bike helmet and wellies, Frances quickly discovers that she might not know as much as she thought she did. Barns are actually a little stinky, and it takes a lot of time to brush a horse and tack it up (what does that even mean?). Not to mention that horses are much bigger in real life, and being so far off the ground can be scary! Will Frances be brave enough to ride Snowball all by herself, or will it be too different from what she’s imagined?