Capture the magic of winters past with this stunning gift for all the family by bestselling author Emma Carroll, and award-winning illustrator, Sam Usher. 'A magical adventure to melt the frostiest of hearts' Ben Miller. It's Christmastime, and searching for magic, Maya finds herself transported back two hundred years to the banks of the frozen river Thames.
A boy called Eddie shows Maya the bustle of the glittering frost fair, filled with music, sweet stalls and thrilling rides. Is this all a dream, or can Maya bring a piece of the beautiful frost fair home...
Capture the magic of winters past with this stunning gift for all the family by bestselling author Emma Carroll, and award-winning illustrator, S...
On one side of the underwater street is the remains of a house . . .
It's beautiful here, and eerie, a lost kingdom, a ghost village . . .
It's the near-future and Britain is having yet another heatwave. Of course, the government have put in the normal curfews for this kind of weather, and shops are forced to shut again. For Polly, it's the sort of heat that makes her do wild, out-of-character things just to cool down.
Like face her fear of deepwater. Essential when she and her brother have been sent to their aunt's eco...
On one side of the underwater street is the remains of a house . . .
It's beautiful here, and eerie, a lost kingdom, a ghost v...
Strange happenings are afoot in the city of Temstown. Everyone is saying vampires are to blame. But the old traditional forms of protection are no longer working, and as the city's powerful figures search desperately for a solution, an unlikely trio of cousins find the answer in a neglected, magical book. The knowledge affords them special vampire-hunting powers, yet the girls' unusual surname - Dracula - means no one believes what they can do. As vampire numbers increase and the city goes into a terrified lockdown, Mina, Buffie and Bella Dracula are forced into action. Someone must...
Strange happenings are afoot in the city of Temstown. Everyone is saying vampires are to blame. But the old traditional forms of protection are no l...