Celebrate Easter with Peter Rabbit! Help Peter find all his friends' eggs in this brand new lift the flap storybook now with a gold foil Easter egg on the cover.
Let's go on an eggciting Easter egg hunt with Peter Rabbit!
Can you help Peter find all his friend's eggs in this brand-new lift the flap storybook?
It's the day of the Easter picnic and there are eggs for everyone! But when Peter knocks over the Easter basket full of eggs, he has to go on a hunt to find them all. Will he make it back in time for the picnic?
Follow Peter on this new Easter adventure and lift the flaps to help him on his search.
Look out for more Peter Rabbit books at Easter: Peter Rabbit: Easter Surprise Peter Rabbit: Happy Easter Peter! A Touch-and-Feel Book Peter Rabbit: A Pop-Up Easter Egg Hunt Peter's First Easter: A counting book
Beatrix Potter was born on July 28, 1866, at No. 2, Bolton Gardens, Kensington, London. Beatrix Potter discovered her love of nature on annual summer holidays in Scotland and the Lake District.
On September 4, 1893, Beatrix sat down to write a picture letter to Noel Moore, the five-year-old son of her ex-governess, all about a naughty rabbit called Peter. Noel was ill in bed and so Beatrix wrote to him: "My dear Noel, I don't know what to write to you, so I shall tell you a story about four little rabbits. . . . "
Some years later, Beatrix thought of publishing the story as a book. She rewrote it into an exercise book and sent it to six publishers. It was rejected by every one of them. It was not until Beatrix had printed the book herself that Frederick Warne agreed to publish it. The Tale of Peter Rabbit was published in 1902, costing one shilling (the equivalent of just 5 pence today), and became one of the most famous stories ever written.
Many of Beatrix's later books were set at Hill Top—the rats that infested the farm inspired The Tale of Samuel Whiskers, Tom Kitten and his sisters climb up the rockery wall at the bottom of Hill Top garden, and Ginger and Pickles.