Author:Ladybird
Ladybird Readers is an ELT graded reader series for children aged 3-11 learning English as a foreign or second language. The series includes traditional tales, popular characters, modern stories, and non-fiction.
Beautifully illustrated and carefully written by language learning experts, the series combines the best of Ladybird content with the structured language progression that will help children develop their reading, writing, speaking, listening and critical thinking skills.
The eight levels follow the Common European Framework of Reference for language learning (CEFR) and include language activities that provide preparation for the Cambridge English Pre-A1 to A2 (YLE) tests.
Visit the Ladybird Readers website for more information. The unique code provided in each printed book will provide access to audio, extra activities and learning resources.
Little Red Riding Hood, a Level 2 Reader, is A1 in the CEFR framework and includes practice for the Cambridge English A1 Movers tests. Short sentences contain a maximum of two clauses, introducing the past tense and some simple adverbs.
Little Red Riding Hood went to her grandmother's house. A wolf lived near it and he wanted to eat Little Red Riding Hood!
Gabor Mate takes us on an epic journey of discovery about how our emotional well-being, and our social connectivity (in short: how we live), is intimately intertwined with health, disease and addictions ... This riveting and beautifully written tale has profound implications for all of our lives, including the practice of medicine and mental health
—— Bessel van der Kolk, author of The Body Keeps the ScoreWise, sophisticated, rigorous and creative: an intellectual and compassionate investigation of who we are and who we may become
—— Tara Westover, author of EducatedA book literally everyone will be enriched by - a wise, profound and healing work that is the culmination of Dr Maté's many years of deep and painfully accumulated wisdom
—— Johann Hari, author of Stolen FocusAn astonishing achievement, epic in scope and yet profoundly down-to-earth and practical. I will read this book again and again
—— V (formerly Eve Ensler), author of The Vagina MonologuesBrilliant, compelling and groundbreaking. Gabor Maté offers us a way to bring clear seeing and a greatness of heart to the crisis of our times
—— Tara Brach, author of Radical CompassionA book in which readers can seek refuge and solace during moments of profound personal and social crisis
—— Esther Perel, psychotherapist and author of Mating in CaptivityGabor Maté's connections - between the intensely personal and the global, the spiritual and the medical, the psychological and the political - are bold, wise and deeply moral. He is a healer to be cherished
—— Naomi Klein, author of No Logo and The Shock DoctrineA compelling book that will challenge your views and help lift the veil of illusion to what is truly happening in your mind and in your body
—— Sharon Salzberg, author of Lovingkindness and Real HappinessGripping ... a powerful call for change in how we live with, love, understand, treat, and think about each other
—— Rebecca Solnit, author of Men Explaining Everything To MeBecause marriage doesn't always bring out the best in us, it makes us wonder what the best in us might be. It is part of the extraordinary wit and wisdom of Baum's remarkable book to show us what kind of romance, and experiment in living, we have wanted marriage to be
—— Adam PhillipsEverything you thought you knew about conjugal beds, secrets, feuds, confessions, triangulations and solaces will be pleasurably complicated by Devorah Baum's wryly insightful tell - all regarding the infinite perversity of marriage - including her own, mine, and probably yours
—— Laura KipnisOn Marriage is a hugely thought-provoking, witty, warm tour around every significant writer and thinker on love to have emerged since Adam and Eve. Baum is a charming guide to the wisdom of her inspiring judiciously curated cohort
—— Alain de BottonBaum looks at marriage from multiple angles, legal and political, social and narrative, its interminability and its dailiness . . . it can be funny or tragic or both. Baum’s methodology is to look at what is missing – a philosophy of marriage, a clear idea of what this dominant structure is and how it influences lives. Lovely
—— The White Review