Description for My Dog is a Carrot
Paperback. A delightful collection of quirky poems by one of this country's most popular poets. Illustrator(s): Stewart, Joel. Num Pages: 64 pages, illustrations. BIC Classification: 5AH; YQE. Category: (JC) Children's (6-12). Dimension: 206 x 123 x 6. Weight in Grams: 82. Good clean copy with minor shelf wear
A delightful collection of quirky poems by one of this country's most popular poets. Enter the celebrated poet's weird, witty, bespectacled world and meet the organic leek who has learned to speak, the octopus who gets a nasty shocktopus, the man who drew his cornflakes and a whole cast of other interesting characters. Surprising, serious, and sometimes just plain silly, this is a collection of poems even your dog might like. Unless your dog is a carrot too.
A delightful collection of quirky poems by one of this country's most popular poets. Enter the celebrated poet's weird, witty, bespectacled world and meet the organic leek who has learned to speak, the octopus who gets a nasty shocktopus, the man who drew his cornflakes and a whole cast of other interesting characters. Surprising, serious, and sometimes just plain silly, this is a collection of poems even your dog might like. Unless your dog is a carrot too.
Product Details
Format
Paperback
Publication date
2008
Publisher
Walker Books Ltd
Condition
Used, Very Good
Number of Pages
64
Place of Publication
London, United Kingdom
ISBN
9781406312089
SKU
KSS0003009
Shipping Time
Usually ships in 2 to 4 working days
Ref
99-1
About John Hegley
John Hegley was very glad to receive a pair of glasses at the age of twelve - he’d wanted some since he was five. Years later he worked with two children's theatre companies: Soapbox and Professor Dogg's Troupe, before becoming the popular, highly original stand-up comedian, poet, singer, songwriter and glasses-wearer that he is today. John Hegley has bendy hands ... Read more
Reviews for My Dog is a Carrot
Beautifully produced with exciting artwork, this book is a pleasure to behold ... It's a truly brilliant book to give to a child that thinks he or she doesn't like poetry. The Irish Post