The Unscary Scarecrow

The Unscary Scarecrow

Rs.245.00 PKR

Author :John Patience

Condition : Used-Very Good

Binding : Hard-Back

Pages : 26

Publisher : Talewater Press

Language : N/A

Publication Year : N/A

(John Patience) own imprint, Talewater Press, this new edition contains the same story and illustrations as the original editions which were first published in the 1980s,

Farmer Bramble's crop is being eaten by crows so his children make a wonderful scarecrow to frighten away the pesky birds. The only problem is, the scarecrow just isn't scary enough. This calls for drastic action!

As Farmer Bramble went out to begin his day‰۪s work, he was singing a little song ‰ÛÒ

Fern Hollow is the place to be,

The leaves are green on every tree.

The sky is blue, don‰۪t need a brolly,

And I'm a farmer, round and jolly.

The little song came to an abrupt end as Farmer Bramble noticed a flock of big black crows in his field, all greedily gobbling up the wheat.

Can you guess what Farmer Bramble‰۪s clever solution to the problem might be?

The charming Fern Hollow stories have remained popular since they were first published in 1980.

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SKU: GB26147
Barcode: 9781916112506
Availability : In Stock In Stock Out of stock
Categories: Children Books, Fiction
Description

Author :John Patience

Condition : Used-Very Good

Binding : Hard-Back

Pages : 26

Publisher : Talewater Press

Language : N/A

Publication Year : N/A

(John Patience) own imprint, Talewater Press, this new edition contains the same story and illustrations as the original editions which were first published in the 1980s,

Farmer Bramble's crop is being eaten by crows so his children make a wonderful scarecrow to frighten away the pesky birds. The only problem is, the scarecrow just isn't scary enough. This calls for drastic action!

As Farmer Bramble went out to begin his day‰۪s work, he was singing a little song ‰ÛÒ

Fern Hollow is the place to be,

The leaves are green on every tree.

The sky is blue, don‰۪t need a brolly,

And I'm a farmer, round and jolly.

The little song came to an abrupt end as Farmer Bramble noticed a flock of big black crows in his field, all greedily gobbling up the wheat.

Can you guess what Farmer Bramble‰۪s clever solution to the problem might be?

The charming Fern Hollow stories have remained popular since they were first published in 1980.