Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
It is one of four children's book awards among the Governor General's Awards for Literary Merit, one each for writers and illustrators of English- and French-language books. The Governor General's Awards program is administered by the Canada Council .
The books are told from the point of view of Nicolas himself, which gives the book a distinct and personal sense of humour. The narration is a pastiche of childish storytelling, with run-on sentences and schoolyard slang used in abundance, and much of the humour derives from Nicolas’s misunderstanding of adults' behaviour.
Les humanités classiques africaines pour les enfants: Volume 1 (2006) Initiation aux humanités classiques africaines pour les enfants de 7 à 17 ans et + (2006) Manuel d'études des humanités classiques africaines (2007) Histoire de l'esclavage: critique du discours eurocentriste (2008) Qu'est-ce qu'être Kamit(e)? (2010)
In 1975 the Canada Council established four annual prizes of $5000 for the year's best English- and French-language children's books by Canadian writers and illustrators.
1842: Les Enfants célèbres, ou Histoire des enfants de tous les siècles et de tous les pays, qui se sont immortalisés par le malheur, la piété, le courage, le génie, le savoir, et les talents, Michel Masson, third edition 1842, Edition: Librairie d'éducation de Didier, Paris 1842 [46]
The Most Beautiful Book in the World ("Odette Toulemonde et autres histoires", 2006) The Woman with the Booklet ("La Rêveuse d'Ostende", 2007) Concerto in Memory of an Angel ("Concerto à la mémoire d'un ange, 2010) Invisible Love ("Les Deux Messieurs de Bruxelles, 2012) Le Poison d'amour (2014) L'Elixir d'amour (2014) La Vengeance du pardon ...
Title page of the 1695 manuscript of Charles Perrault's Contes de ma mère l'Oye (The Morgan Library & Museum, New York) [1]. Histoires ou contes du temps passé, avec des moralités or Contes de ma mère l'Oye (Stories or Tales from Past Times, with Morals or Mother Goose Tales) [2] is a collection of literary fairy tales written by Charles Perrault, published in Paris in 1697.
Christelle Dabos was born in 1980 in Cannes on the Côte d'Azur [1] and grew up in a family of musicians. The author moved across the border to a village near La Louvière in Wallonia, [2] Belgium, [3] in 2005 and unsuccessfully sought work as a librarian.