000 01896nam a22002537a 4500
001 4435
003 FISKH
005 20260422105240.0
008 240909b cb ||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d
020 _a9781862301672
040 _aFISKH
_beng
_cFISKH
_dFISKH
082 _a823.92
100 _aGray, Kes
245 _aDaisy and the trouble with life /
_cBy Kes Gray
250 _aThis edition published 2007
260 _aLondon :
_bRed Fox,
_c2007.
300 _a236 pages :
_billustrations ;
_c18 cm
520 _aIn Daisy's guide to life, nothing is quite black and white. The trubble with life is it's sooooooo not fair. The trouble with Mums is that you can't swap them for other mums when you need to. And the trouble with being grounded is it's sooooooo boring. You absolutely can't go anywhere at all. No hopping jumping, flying or parachuting...Daisy's got ever so much time to think about what she's done. Really, it wasn't her fault. If her pocket money hadn't run out, and if someone hadn't dropped a strawberry dib-dab on the pavement and if strawberry dib-dabs weren't Daisy's absolutely favourite sweet... Who knew that it had invisible red germs that are so totally teensy and that Auntie Sue says give you tummy trouble?Daisy's trips to the loo are interspersed with hilarious musings about the trouble with everything, from her goldfish Freddie who thinks it's a dolphin, to playing nicely at Gabby's house, to the school name-caller Jack Beechwhistle, to remote control cars and hosepipes that don't do as they're told.Now, if only Daisy can find a word to rhyme with hippopotamus, she and Gabby can magic next door's cat into a hippo. When she's un-grounded and off the loo, of course...
650 _2Funny
_aChildren's fiction
_vHome-library
650 _2Children_and_teens
_aHumor
_vNovel
700 _aParsons, Garry
_dIllustrator
942 _2ddc
_cBK
_n0
999 _c4435
_d4435