Princess Charlotte and the Birthday Ball (The Tiara Club, Book 1)
Author | : | |
Rating | : | 4.49 (653 Votes) |
Asin | : | 0061124281 |
Format Type | : | paperback |
Number of Pages | : | 69 Pages |
Publish Date | : | 2016-02-11 |
Language | : | English |
DESCRIPTION:
At school she developed an attachment to words and later became an actor, then a storyteller, and finally a writer of children's books. French lives in Edinburgh, Scotland, and has four grown daughters. Sarah Gibb has provided artwork for many children's book, greeting cards, newspapers, and magazines. About the AuthorVivian French was best known in school for being extremely skinny and for talking a lot. She is the author of more than two hundred books. She lives in London.. Ms
What will Princess Charlotte and her friends do without their beautiful gowns?. On the first day at the Princess Academy, everything goes wrong. The girls' ball gowns are ruined
She lives in London.. Vivian French was best known in school for being extremely skinny and for talking a lot. At school she developed an attachment to words and later became an actor, then a storyteller, and finally a writer of children's books. Ms. Sarah Gibb has provided artwork for many children's book, greeting cards, newspapers, and magazines. She is t
Lori Antonetti said Five Stars. My granddaughter loves this book. I look forward to buying her more !. Cheerful and friendly little girls learn valuable lessons Pop Bop A lot of the Disney Princess books are incoherent, and the rest of the "Bratz" type books feature girl/women with very weird priorities. I got this on a lark to see how it would go over with my six year old. Well, the little girls are little girls, not bimbos in training. They stick together and they help each other. They take responsibility for their actions. They are decent and loyal. Now, there are gowns and balls and frou-frou, but that is not the be-all and end-all of their lives. My read. The Library Lady said In the Words of Douglas Adams "Mostly Harmless". Well, the covers look too much like Bratz dolls, something that is verboten in my house. And the stories don't have that much depth. Read one and you've basically read them all.That said, my nearly 9 year old (an excellent, but lazy reader!) has devoured these unlike any other series she has read, and is now writing her OWN "Tiara Club" books!They are easy to read and unlike Disney's nubile princesses, these princesses are LITTLE GIRLS. Take away their crowns and their fairy godmothers and the