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Daisy woke up excited, as this was going to be her first day at preschool, where she was going to be able to meet new friends and play, even make a mess painting.
And doing cut-outs, it was going to be so much fun. Daisy’s friend Annie was going to meet her at the gate to show her around and meet the teachers.
“Wow,” Daisy thought, “I can paint auras and show everyone while telling them what all the colours mean. This was going to be so much fun.”
“Come on, Shelby!” she says as she bounces on the bed for her morning cuddle, knocking her clothes off the bed. I’ll have to get dressed. I have a lot to do today.
£5.84 -
Did You Do Your Homework to Find the Truth? I read and understand—therefore, I am
Whether you stand at the altar of faith or tread the path of scepticism, this book invites you into a shared human task—thinking seriously about the question that shape existence. Life is a big classroom; it teaches relentlessly. From the moment we become aware, we are placed in a vast school without walls, desks, or bells. Its curriculum is existence itself. Every human being is entrusted with a quiet mission—to seek understanding, to question deeply, and to arrive at truth through sincere effort. Its lessons unfold through reason, experience, suffering, discovery, and reflection. And its most pressing question is not ‘What do you believe?’, but how did you arrive there? When this book asks, “Did you do your homework to find the truth?” it invokes intellectual responsibility. In the school of life, homework is the disciplined effort to read, examine, question, and understand—rather than inherit, imitate, or repeat. Too often, beliefs about God, meaning, and existence are adopted without investigation. Authority is borrowed. Slogans replace reasoning. Doubt is asserted, not examined. Yet in every other serious domain of life, claims demand evidence, arguments demand logic, and conclusions demand justification. — Why, then, should the most fundamental questions of existence be treated differently? Drawing from science, philosophy, logic, and revelation, this book challenges the reader to step into the adulthood of thought. It examines the most common responses used to deny the existence of God and asks a simple but unsettling question: have you done the intellectual work to justify your beliefs—or merely accepted them unexamined?Life is the school.Reason is the tool.Understanding is the responsibility.The mission is to seek truth with honesty and courage. This book does not ask what to think. It asks whether you have done the work required to think at all.An invitation to move from inherited answers to examined understanding.
£11.69 -
Based on a true event, Djalu – A Year of Three’s, is a story revolving around the brutal murder of a young female student in her low-rent council flat in London.
When a young female student is brutally murdered in her London council flat, the police follow a trail of clues that leads nowhere and arrest the wrong man. The victim’s ex-boyfriend is certain they’ve got it wrong, but the innocent man is sentenced to life in prison.
With his three best mates, the ex-boyfriend turns to Djalu, a close friend, fellow student, and rugby teammate. Together, they set out to hunt down the real killer.
But when the police have failed, what chance do a handful of students have? And how far will they have to go to uncover the truth?
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From the moment Bennet woke up in a dark cell, he knew his life had changed forever. His senses had heightened, his strength and speed had changed, and he could now sense a human heartbeat and smell human blood from meters away.
But he wasn’t a monster.
Not wanting to lose his human side, he kept to himself, away from human population unless he needed to for survival. It was a lonely existence, particularly when you were immortal.
Then one day, he comes across a young fallen rider with irreversible injuries and, tired of being alone, Bennet offers him a chance of immortality.
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Treasure!
Pools of pearls and gallons of GOLD!
We wants it and we wants it now!
But first there are the trials and traps of Dangerous Island.
Will Cap’n Jack and the crew of the good ship Ruby survive the adventure? Or will Cap’n Bad capture the treasure for himself and his rapscallion crew?
Who will walk through Snake Valley and Hungry Tree Grove? Who will brave the plank to Dead End Walk and Treasure Lookout?
Who will find the treasure?
Will it be you?
£7.14 -
In Under the Barkly Sky, Stuart Phillpot provides a comprehensive history of the Barkly Region’s Traditional Owners. This well-researched book chronicles the resilience of the Wumparrani peoples over 150 years in the face of colonisation, cultural erosion, and changing government policies. Phillpot combines historical records, Indigenous voices, and analysis to tell a story of resilience, adaptation, and their ongoing struggle for justice.
From the violent ‘Killing Times’ to land rights victories and the hope for an Indigenous ‘Voice’ to Parliament, Under the Barkly Sky reflects Australia’s colonial legacy and invites us to envision a fairer future.
This book is for those seeking to understand the challenges and resilience of the Barkly’s Aboriginal communities, and offers valuable insights for policymakers, researchers, and everyone who is interested in these aspects of Australia’s history.
“Under the Barkly Sky explores the interactions between non-Aboriginal with and the Barkly Traditional Owners, the continuing violence and deaths, land rights successes, and never-ending changes to complex government policies affecting Aboriginal communities over the last 150 years.”
Pat Dodson - Former Minister of Indigenous Affairs (2022-2024)
“Stuart Phillpot powerfully highlights the negative experiences of Australian Indigenous people resulting from Australia’s ongoing contradictory interpretations of internationally accepted human rights. The stories and reflections in Under the Barkly Sky tackle many profound philosophical issues. Reading this book will be rewarding for those seeking the truth.”
Lieutenant General John Sanderson AC - Governor of Western Australia (2000-2005)My writing of this book has been supported by a team of advisors across many areas of knowledge.
These include Indigenous peoples and their lands, cultures, and histories. politics, society, wealth and poverty, and the resulting inter-woven history of constant change.
Additionally, I wish to thank my friend David Carroll for his invaluable, multifaceted skills and support in framing and guiding the book’s progress towards publication as a valuable chronicle.
Stuart Phillpot 2026£28.59 -
Showsy Growsy's Musical Fracasee
Join hoity-toity Showsy Growsy alongside her friends Bubbledegook and Bubbledegeek for a great day of melody-making.
The bright blonde girl who knows how to do just about anything turns out to be quite the fusspot when a sing-along song finds her picking and choosing a handful of select friends to count as in.
Meanwhile that pair of predictable pesties, her sometime friends, the knockabout twins Bubbledegook and Bubbledegeek, settle for a musical day of loutish laughs, learning all about Showsy Growsy’s wonderful range of colorful instruments, drumming up a raucous day of ragbag rip-roaring fun of their own.
Getting Showsy Growsy to change her mind, though, isn’t easy. And trying to get the twins to join in and play a song at just the right time only seems to strum up more and more disharmony.
Musically speaking, Showsy Growsy, Bubbledegook, and Bubbledegeek bang together one noisy, mishmashy day of rowdy rhythm and blues!
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Sebbie's and Dino's Dream Adventures
Sebbie is a three-year-old boy with a secret…
After his mummy gives him a kiss goodnight and closes his bedroom door, his favourite cuddly toy, Dino, comes alive.
Together, Dino and Sebbie crawl under the bed, where even more toys come to life. They set off on adventures to explore different magical worlds. In this world, everything is made of sweets and chocolate. Sebbie must resist the temptation to eat it all, but can he?
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Healing Your Inner Child Journey
It’s about the survival of birth and the survival of life itself—about growing up and feeling like an outsider, never fitting in.
It is a journey of healing old wounds and new ones, of confronting childhood traumas and fighting not to repeat the mistakes of parents and family. This is about moving through the darkest of times and growing with light in my heart, overcoming the bitterness I felt for what I’d been through as a child from the people who were there to protect me.
I survived, and I still have love in my heart. I’m a good person. They could have destroyed me, but it made me stronger. This is a story of love and light.
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War Above Falkirk and Beyond...
The story is set in 1942, during WWII, with action in Edinburgh, Grangemouth, London, Berlin, Paris, Troyes, Soissons, Glasgow and Rosyth Docks. It tells the story of munitions factory staff Betty, Brady and Sally Simpson at a local pub, where they encounter a stranger, Bjorn Larsson, who is actually Horst Meyer, a German spy sent to detect Rosyth Docks and RAF Grangemouth, which Hitler wants to eliminate and destroy.
The thrilling plot is an action-packed adventurous tale of intrigue, subterfuge, romance, espionage, heroism, fistfights, gunfights and aerial fights too! The plot also includes the French Resistance and Soviet spies in Berlin. All players, in their own way, attempt to overthrow the evil axis created in Berlin.
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An armoury of expression. The envious words compete for your attention. There is intent—a form of pleasure. The war for prominence is thriving as the battle ensues. A plan to imprint stains, if you will, throwing a biscuit and sugar sachet your way; this narrator's hope is that mugs might settle to be a source of paint splashes in your life. Choose your own colour, but be cautious because it could lead to a permanent mark. There is an urge to capture your imagination; could I persuade you into the most comfortable of seats in your favourite room? The ambience which prevails would guarantee an audience, partners. The secret world of being a reader is the ultimate escape.
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The present volume, entitled Later Sonnets, continues the writer’s exploration of the classical form. If the earlier work drew upon the eighteenth century and the language of the law, here the hand is surer, the voice more seasoned, and the reflections more tempered by experience.
The poems remain serious in their general cast, yet moments of wit and humanity are not absent. They range across the landscape of the human spirit, considering with candour its trials, renewals, and quiet revelations. Once again, the writer respectfully submits this collection to the discernment of his readers, whether they approach in sympathy, in judgement, or perhaps both.
£7.79