New2theScene

44 Tiny Acrobats: 2

Sylvia Bishop

44 Tiny Acrobats: 2

Paperback
,
February 4, 2021
£ 6.99 
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The 44 Tiny series is perfect for fans of Isadora Moon or Kitty. My six year old loves these stories, and Betsy. We can't wait to find out what happens next!
Toppsta reviewer - LG

Synopsis

The second book in 44 Tiny Secrets series.

Join brave and spirited heroine Betsy and her forty-four tiny mice in a thrilling new adventure.

When Fry’s Circus of Wonders pitches its tent opposite Betsy’s house, Betsy feels a strange sense of longing. But Grandad can’t even bear to look at it – it stirs up too many painful memories of Grandma’s days as a circus performer.

As her parents rally round Grandad, Betsy slips away to see the show. But Betsy isn’t the only one enjoying the spectacle – her forty-four mice have escaped and seem intent on joining in! As the mice gatecrash the magic act, disaster strikes and Betsy finds herself facing up to the odious ringmaster with a lot of explaining to do…

Beautifully illustrated in two-colour, this is the second adventure for Besty and her forty-four mice, from the acclaimed duo behind THE BOOKSHOP GIRL.

Product Information

Number of pages
192
Publisher
Little Tiger Press Group
#ISBN
Number of pages
9781788952057
Date of Publication
February 4, 2021
Format
Paperback
Weight
336
g
Dimensions
13
x
19.9
x
1.4
cm

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Reviews

Super cute!
Goodreads reviewer - M
The second in the trilogy and it was as good as the first. Betsy and the mice are off to the circus but she is conflicted as she has to keep it a secret from her family. This touches on themes of forgiveness and restitution in an age appropriate way. Best line goes to Grandpa: “I once pretended to nap for three days when your mother wanted to organise a party”.
Goodreads reviewer - Y

About the author

Sylvia Bishop

Sylvia Bishop spent an entire childhood reading fiction, dreaming up stories and pretending. She then tried very hard to get to grips with the real world by studying politics and going in to social science research. This was a shock. Thankfully, she discovered improvised comedy at university, which allowed her to carry on making up stories for at least 30% of her waking hours.

Now she writes her stories down, preferably by lamp-light with tea. She only ever really writes the bad ones: the good ones write themselves without warning, generally when she was planning to go to bed.

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£ 6.99