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Teatime for Pirates!: A Ladybird Skullabones Island picture book
  • Published: 5 March 2015
  • ISBN: 9780723298939
  • Imprint: Penguin eBooks
  • Format: EBook
  • Pages: 32

Teatime for Pirates!: A Ladybird Skullabones Island picture book




The perfect dose of teatime fun for pirate fans everywhere!

"But Captain, what's this on our plates?
We don't want this for tea!
Sausages aren't pirate food.
You don't eat those at sea!"

Captain Cutlass's crew don't want to eat their tea. How can he persuade them to tuck in? Why, a pirate needs his sausages to keep him quick and bright!

With delightful rhyming text and humorous illustrations, Teatime for Pirates! will help your little hearties eat up and leave them asking for more!

  • Published: 5 March 2015
  • ISBN: 9780723298939
  • Imprint: Penguin eBooks
  • Format: EBook
  • Pages: 32

About the author

Richard Dungworth

Richard has written over forty books for children. He began his writing career as an in-house author, working on non-fiction, first at Usborne Publishing, and later at Ladybird Books. Since going freelance nearly ten years ago, he has created original stories to support a wide range of exciting licensed properties. These include: Doctor Who; Wallace and Gromit; Transformers; MI High; Captain Scarlet and The Incredibles. Richard lives in Leicestershire with his wife and two young children.
Richard's rather unfortunate surname comes from a village in South Yorkshire, where his ancestors lived. It means 'a dwelling with dried cow pats for roofing'. Lovely.

Richard has written over forty books for children and began his writing career as an in-house author, working on non-fiction, first at Usborne Publishing, and later at Ladybird Books. Since going freelance, he has created original stories to support a wide range of exciting licensed properties such as Doctor Who; Wallace and Gromit; Transformers; MI High; Captain Scarlet and The Incredibles.

Richard lives in Leicestershire with his wife and two young children. Richard's rather unfortunate surname comes from a village in South Yorkshire, where his ancestors lived. It means 'a dwelling with dried cow pats for roofing'. Lovely.

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