Author:Libby Burns,Ladybird
Change each Magic Window and watch the world transform...
Magic Windows is the new novelty non-fiction series from Ladybird Books. Perfect for curious toddlers, this new series explores the wonderful transformations found in nature.
Little ones will love to pull the sliding mechanism on each spread and change what appears in each Magic Window. They will learn what hides within a seed, why insects are important and watch flowers bloom.
With Magic Windows: Growing, toddlers will not only learn more about how animals and plants grow, they will interact and play with it too!
The Magic Windows series:
Introduces the world
Boosts motor skills
Recommended for children aged 2+
Look out for other titles in the Ladybird Magic Windows series:
Weather
My Body
Seasons
Few plots can rival the real-life dramas played out in the superb Adventures in Time series by the historian Dominic Sandbrook, one of the most exciting new voices in children's non-fiction.
—— Daily TelegraphHistory and fiction meld in a spectacular new series retelling thrilling tales from past eras, all with the benefit of the latest research.
—— Financial TimesBrimming with facts and rich in detail ... the brio of the accounts sweep children along on the adventure and introduce them to the way in which history shapes our modern world.
—— Daily Mail Children's Books of the Year 2021History and fiction meld in a spectacular new series retelling thrilling tales from past eras, all with the benefit of the latest research.
—— Financial TimesFor lovers of non-fiction, Dominic Sandbrook's narrative series has been a boon ... This volume is inevitably moving, and an illuminating chronicle of the waste of war.
—— The Times Children's Books of the YearStolen History is a truly remarkable achievement: an historically accurate, diligently researched and nuanced account of the British Empire that is also gripping for younger readers. I know of no other writer who could have accomplished such a feat.
—— Professor Alan Lester FRHistS, Professor of Historical Geography and Professor of History, La Trobe UniversitySanghera brilliantly demonstrates that history doesn't have to be dumbed down to be made accessible, nor does it need to be sensationalized to seem relevant. Written with integrity and a deep commitment to reveal how the past has shaped our present, the book will make young readers engage with history as more than just entertainment and it will encourage them to ask new questions.
—— Kim A. Wagner, Professor of Global and Imperial History, School of History Queen Mary, University of London