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Clarice Bean, That's Me

On sale

4th September 2014

Price: £11.99

CILIP Kate Greenaway Children's Book Award, 1999

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Selected: Hardcover / ISBN-13: 9781408335468
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Meet the fabulously feisty Clarice Bean! In this hilarious picture book from Children’s Laureate, Lauren Child.

All Clarice Bean wants is a bit of peace and quiet. But that can be hard to find in a house where your little brother is being utterly annoying, your big brother is in the dark tunnel of adolescence and your grandad’s pouring soup on his cornflakes . . .

A true picture book classic, this is the book that launched the award-winning, bestselling Clarice Bean series!

Packed with quirky details and humour, this is perfect for children who are ready to start making the transition from younger picture books to independent reading,

“A fresh, playful, wonderfully chaotic look at family life that will make you laugh out loud” Independent

Winner of the Smarties Book Prize

Reviews

Literacy and Learning
Represents the arrival of a sparkling and irresistable new talent
The Bookseller
For a humorous and refreshingly honest look at family life, you can't get any better than this
Times Educational Supplement
Full of wonderfully dry one-liners
Sainsburys Magazine
A modern classic
Sunday Express (Cressida Cowell)
Wonderful to read aloud.
The Guardian
The quirky perspectives show cheerful disregard for convention in this unusual take on family life
The Independent
A fresh, playful, wonderfully chaotic look at family life that will make you laugh out loud
The Guardian
Brilliantly written and drawn by Lauren Child, the cringe-worthy details are a joy
The Bookseller
Laugh-out-loud funny gloss on family life
Sunday Times
It'll make you roar with laughter
The Independent
A real treat. This is only Lauren Child's second book for children and I'm totally hooked
Books for Keeps
Child's spot-on portrait of family life...has an anthropological quality reminiscent of Posy Simmonds' Weber family...exuberantly inventive
The Guardian
Text and illustrations are united in giving this wittily ironic, child's-eye view of familiar characters and their foibles