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Once there was a grandfather Who had a very strange name: It was Puppy, not Papa or Grampa, And pancakes were his claim to fame. Puppy loves to make pancakes with his grandchildren because of the special bond it creates between them. After he teams with his grandkids to mix the batter, gather utensils and secret ingredients, and grease the griddle, Puppy then introduces them to his favorite pancake friends that include Lucy and the Beast, the Prince, the Frog, Abby the Mermaid, Black Beard and Red Beard, Santa, and many others. Included are short poems and pictures of each pancake followed by…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Once there was a grandfather Who had a very strange name: It was Puppy, not Papa or Grampa, And pancakes were his claim to fame. Puppy loves to make pancakes with his grandchildren because of the special bond it creates between them. After he teams with his grandkids to mix the batter, gather utensils and secret ingredients, and grease the griddle, Puppy then introduces them to his favorite pancake friends that include Lucy and the Beast, the Prince, the Frog, Abby the Mermaid, Black Beard and Red Beard, Santa, and many others. Included are short poems and pictures of each pancake followed by detailed instructions on how children can bring them into being and create their own special pancake friends! Puppy's Pancakes shares the delightful story of a grandfather who utilizes his artistic cooking skills to teach his grandchildren how to prepare pancakes and make friends in the process.
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Autorenporträt
First-time author David Slade at 60, will blow the minds of his childhood contemporaries. His headmaster had him destined for a very ordinary life on the end of a broom, but after a wide career that has seen him have the need for armed guards in Manchester and daily commutes to Scotland, it is his passion for arts and in particular writing which led him to write The Third Tunnel as a stage show during the early 2000s, with the Company of A Class Act Theatre in Newbury, David's hometown, staging the show on several occasions in the local theatres. David's mum and dad met at the local Corn Exchange during their pantomimes and his grandfather, a cockney who'd moved from London after the Blitz, would operate the Box Office at this time, David has theatre very much ingrained.