Pier and the Jumpstones (e-bog) af Estrada, Rafael
Estrada, Rafael

Pier and the Jumpstones e-bog

34,65 DKK
Have I ever told you the story of Pier?Pier was a boy with a mouse nose, dreamy look and hedgehog hairs. He believed he could do anything he set out to be, he was that innocent.-I would like to jump like the jumpstones, - he said one day, almost without knowing why, loud enough for others to hear.His mother, Crossbow, smiled as mothers do; spring, his father, coughed as parents cough; and the gr…
Have I ever told you the story of Pier?Pier was a boy with a mouse nose, dreamy look and hedgehog hairs. He believed he could do anything he set out to be, he was that innocent.-I would like to jump like the jumpstones, - he said one day, almost without knowing why, loud enough for others to hear.His mother, Crossbow, smiled as mothers do; spring, his father, coughed as parents cough; and the grandfather shook his head up and down.All this happened on a sunny morning, when winter was beginning to say goodbye to stony. The grass was dropped to one side and then to the other because the wind wanted it that way.Crossbow knew Pier's hobby of imagining impossible things. While combing the two rebel swirls, with all the patience of a mother, he asked:What madness is that of dreaming about jumping, as if there were no jumpstones?
E-bog 34,65 DKK
Forfattere Estrada, Rafael (forfatter), Moreno, Vicente (oversætter)
Udgivet 14.08.2019
Genrer Children’s / Teenage fiction: Action and adventure stories
Sprog English
Format epub
Beskyttelse LCP
ISBN 9781071506042

Have I ever told you the story of Pier?Pier was a boy with a mouse nose, dreamy look and hedgehog hairs. He believed he could do anything he set out to be, he was that innocent.-I would like to jump like the jumpstones, - he said one day, almost without knowing why, loud enough for others to hear.His mother, Crossbow, smiled as mothers do; spring, his father, coughed as parents cough; and the grandfather shook his head up and down.All this happened on a sunny morning, when winter was beginning to say goodbye to stony. The grass was dropped to one side and then to the other because the wind wanted it that way.Crossbow knew Pier's hobby of imagining impossible things. While combing the two rebel swirls, with all the patience of a mother, he asked:What madness is that of dreaming about jumping, as if there were no jumpstones?