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Meadow wakes up one morning in a bad mood. She is mean to everyone in her family. Her parents ask if she's lost her manners. Please and thank you have completely disappeared. She drops her sister's cell phone in the bath and breaks her brother's Spiderman toy and doesn't say she's sorry. The family embark on a journey through the summer garden to find Meadow's manners, asking the creatures who live in the garden if they have seen Meadow's manners. At the end of the day, Meadow remembers to say thank you. She says sorry to her brother and sister. Meadow realizes she's had her manners all along.…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Meadow wakes up one morning in a bad mood. She is mean to everyone in her family. Her parents ask if she's lost her manners. Please and thank you have completely disappeared. She drops her sister's cell phone in the bath and breaks her brother's Spiderman toy and doesn't say she's sorry. The family embark on a journey through the summer garden to find Meadow's manners, asking the creatures who live in the garden if they have seen Meadow's manners. At the end of the day, Meadow remembers to say thank you. She says sorry to her brother and sister. Meadow realizes she's had her manners all along. She just didn't use them that day. This story is a reminder that we all have manners but sometimes we forget to use them.
Autorenporträt
Peta-Gaye Nash is an adult and children's author. She was born in 1968 in Kingston, Jamaica and has also lived in the United States, Norway and Canada. She studied Labour Relations at McMaster University in Hamilton, Ontario and has made Canada home for the past twenty years. Peta-Gaye wrote her first children's story in 2003 but she put it at the back of her closet because the story didn't have a happy ending. Six years later, Peta-Gaye's story got its happy ending and her first children's book, Don't Take Raja to School, was published. She has six children's books published and in 2015, she won the Marty Awards for Emerging Literary Art. In 2013, she got an honorable mention for the same award. Peta-Gaye teaches English as a Second Language during the day and writes at night. She lives in Mississauga, Ontario with her husband and four children.