Quog and Oort are on their way to Kevin's birthday party. Unfortunately, there's been a slight detour. Their spaceship has crash-landed. If only someone could lend them a hand. A highly-entertaining picture book about two party-going aliens that also explores the anatomy of the h...uman hand by the brilliant team behind the internationally successful Do Not Lick This Book.
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ISBN |
9781911631583 |
Published NZ |
3 Oct 2019 |
Publisher |
Allen & Unwin |
Format |
Hardback |
Alternate Format(s) |
View All (2 other possible title(s) available)
|
Availability |
Not currently available
|
Full details for this title
ISBN-13 |
9781911631583 |
|
Stock |
Out of stock |
Status |
Not currently available |
|
Publisher |
Allen & Unwin |
Imprint |
Allen & Unwin Children's Books |
Published |
3 Oct 2019
|
Publication Country |
Australia |
|
Format |
Hardback
|
|
Author(s) |
By Ben-Barak, Idan By Frost, Julian |
Category |
General Picture Books Australian
|
|
Number of Pages |
32 |
Dimensions |
Width: 210mm Height: 252mm
|
Dewey Code |
823.92 |
Weight |
Not specified - defaults to 1,000g |
|
Interest Age |
5-8 years |
Reading Age |
5-8 years |
Library of Congress |
Human skeleton - Juvenile fiction - Pictorial works |
NBS Text |
Picture Books |
ONIX Text |
Children/juvenile |
|
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Awards, Reviews & Star Ratings
UK Review |
Bertrams Star Rating: 2 stars (out of 5) |
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Author's Bio
Idan Ben-Barak holds a BSc in medical science, an MSc in microbiology, and a PhD in the history and philosophy of science. His first book, Small Wonders: How Microbes Rule Our World has been published around the world and won the 2010 American Association for the Advancement of Science/Subaru SB&F (Science Books and Films) Prize for Excellence in Science Books, Young Adult category. An excerpt from his most recent book, Why Aren't We Dead Yet? The Survivor's Guide to the Immune System, was runner-up for the 2015 Bragg UNSW Press Prize for Science Writing. Idan lives in Melbourne with his wife and two children. Julian Frost is an illustrator, designer and animator. Julian received worldwide acclaim for his animation 'Dumb Ways to Die' which has had close to 150 million views since it was uploaded on YouTube in 2012. With his illustration work for kids, Julian loves using likeable silliness in the service of communicating serious information. He lives in Melbourne.
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