Activity Books
Ladybird Books has published two sticker books (one of which is a glow in the dark sticker book) a poster book, a tattoo activity title, a wipe-clean activity book, and a summer annual for children from five to eight years old.
# | Title | Publisher | Released | ISBN |
1 | Primeval: Sticker Collection | E-Max | November 2007 | TBA |
2 | Primeval: Stats & Facts Poster Book | Ladybird Books | November 2007 | ISBN 1-84646-806-X |
3 | Primeval: Anomaly Activity Book | Ladybird Books | November 2007 | ISBN 1-84646-807-8 |
4 | Primeval: Activity Annual | Ladybird Books | March 2008 | ISBN 1-84646-894-9 |
5 | Primeval: Funfax | Dorling Kindersley | March 2008 | ISBN 1-4053-2919-X |
6 | Primeval: Glow in the Dark Sticker Book | Ladybird Books | March 2008 | ISBN 1-84646-871-X |
7 | Primeval: Tattoo Activity Book | Ladybird Books | October 2008 | ISBN 1-84646-872-8 |
8 | Primeval: Monster Wipe-out Games Book | Ladybird Books | October 2008 | ISBN 1-84646-972-4 |
9 | Primeval: Midnight Terror Trail Activity Book | Ladybird Books | March 2009 | ISBN 1-4093-0237-7 |
10 | Primeval: Brain Twisters Sticker Book | Ladybird Books | March 2009 | ISBN 1-4093-0236-9 |
Read more about this topic: List Of Primeval Books And Novelisations
Famous quotes containing the words activity and/or books:
“Genghis Khan, in his usual jodhpurs accessorized with whip, straddled a canvas chair and gloated upon the fairyland he had built. Journalists, photographers, secretaries, sycophants, script girls, and set dressers milled and stirred around him, activity ... irresistibly reminiscent of the movement of maggots upon rotting meat.”
—Angela Carter (19401992)
“In an extensive reading of recent books by psychologists, psychoanalysts, psychiatrists, and inspirationalists, I have discovered that they all suffer from one or more of these expression-complexes: italicizing, capitalizing, exclamation-pointing, multiple-interrogating, and itemizing. These are all forms of what the psychos themselves would call, if they faced their condition frankly, Rhetorical-Over-Compensation.”
—James Thurber (18941961)