About this deal
Spring blossoms with a new friendship.
And so he finds a way to wake up his friends so they can enjoy the sights, smells and sounds of spring all together. A first printed edition (2021) hardcover copy with spot UV cover detailing. This is because the books is a cleared item. ~ Enter on 12th Ave (between LaSpiga & Plum Bistro) From Henrique Coser Moreira comes a wordless ode to joy and discovery that will stir readers young and old. 71 Balham High Road, Balham, SW12 9AP Celebrate the Wheel of the Year with Flora and her friends in Flora & The First Day of Spring, the first book from author Kathleen Converse’s new sabbat series. When Hoppy the rabbit wakes up on the first day of spring, he discovers a world full of wonderful things! Rest assured, these books are thoughtfully chosen to provide you with the most enjoyable reading experience possible.
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Reviews
Carpool Book Club
A single mother, all she wants is for her daughter to have the childhood she herself was denied. An incredible empathetic piece of writing.
Fictionophile
Fans of “The Push” rejoice…this psychological drama is right up your alley. Julia is so careful and so different to the little girl that she once was. Her mother never wanted children and is very neglectful and her da is never around for her and when he does appear he doesn’t want anything to do with Chrissie.
Mdealwis
A page-turner: it’s arduous, intense and heart-breaking due to the descriptions of neglect and abuse. She tries very hard to be a good mother – though she has no experience of how motherhood is supposed to work. That’s why the threatening phone calls are so terrifying.
A Waybourne
The feeling made her belly fizz like soda pop. Hearing the story through Chrissie and Julia gave you the complete picture of what life had been like before and after the crime.
Izzy
The inner dialogue for Chrissie (child) is incredibly clear, full of naïveté, occasionally humorous and necessarily subtle…all while flawlessly relaying the point. Her clothes are ragged and skin complaints, and she lives with parents who don’t care. Both as a child, and as an adult, Chrissie has felt unworthy.