• The Land of Plenty: A Word Book (Hardcover)

    Age Range: 0 – 5 years

    Help young children to learn NEW WORDS and improve their VOCABULARY with this exciting first word book!

    Readers will delight in finding words with pictures by award-winning South African illustrator Toby Newsome.

    Kathy Knowles, an Honorary Fellow of the Ghana Library Association, researched the words for accuracy in the Ghanaian context.

    • Covers all the key first concepts
    • Pictures are Ghana- and Afro-centric

    An ideal gift for pre-school children.

    This book includes:

    • The alphabet and numbers
    • My body
    • My family
    • Our home
    • Our kitchen
    • Foodstuffs
    • Auntie Joana’s food joint with pictures of indigenous Ghanaian foods
    • Fruits and vegetables
    • Life in our city
    • Moving along
    • Animals in our world
    • Games we play including pilolo!
    • Jobs we do
    • Life in a fishing village
    • …and much much more!

    In essence, it is your Ghana-centric-most word book you would find! Akin to a toddler’s book of everything!

  • The Toddler’s Big Book of Everything: Everything A Toddler Needs to Know! (Hardcover)

    Age Range: 1 – 3 years

    Help young children to learn NEW WORDS and improve their VOCABULARY with this exciting first word book!

    • Covers all the key first concepts
    • Words arranged subject by subject

    An ideal gift for pre-school children.

    This book includes:

    • Essential first words — and hundreds more
    • The alphabet, numbers, colours and counting
    • Interactive, open questions to engage the child
    • Important key early-learning objectives
  • G is for Ghana (Hardcover)

    Age Range: 5+ years

    This ABC book is written with beautiful memories of Ghana in mind. I wanted to showcase the rich cultures in my native land and to relive the nostalgic feelings of my youth.

    Ghana is a West African country nestled among Burkina Faso in the north, the Gulf of Guinea in the south, Togo in the east and Ivory Coast in the west. It is made up of an amazing blend of varied cultures and tribal influences, with great tribes such as the Dagombas, Frafras, Kusasis, Walas and the Gonjas from the north and the Ashantis, Akyems, Fantis, Ewes and the Gas in the south!

    I hope this book does portray the beautiful and most friendly country, Ghana.

     

  • My First Picture Dictionary (Boardbook)

    Age Range: 2 – 3 years

    My First Picture Dictionary is the perfect first reference book created to help your child learn new words in an easy and fun-filled way.

    This book includes over 500 commonly used words accompanied by colourful and amusing illustrations of familiar subjects to better understanding. It covers alphabets, numbers, shapes, colours, part of the body and much more!

  • Learning ABC with Joshua (Little Sage Activity Book)

    Age Range: 3 – 6 years

    Little Sage Activity Books are designed to start children on the right path to a lifetime of reading, counting and writing.

    The books are designed to be engaging and to hold the short attention span characterised by children of this age group.

    Research has shown that children learn faster and well when they are enjoying themselves.

    We reward children with stickers not just for a completed right answer but for effort; this is to encourage teamwork and build confidence, necessary for the journey through life.

  • A is for Accra

    A is for Accra is a beautifully-illustrated journey around Ghana from A to Z, and it rhymes! Younger children will recognise the letters in the book and have fun identifying items they know in each illustration. Older children learn about Ghana and the world around them.

    There’s a glossary in the back for parents to learn more and share with their kids about the places, foods and people in the book.

    A is for Accra

    33.00
  • Kente for a King (Hardcover)

    Age Range: 7 – 10 years

    Kathy Knowles’ retelling of Angela Christian’s Kente for a King describes the journey of Opoku, a weaver from Bonwire, Ghana, and his quest to make the most magnificent kente cloth for his beloved King.

    Edmund Opare’s finely detailed illustrations and his ability to capture the magnitude of Opoku’s achievements within a traditional Ghanaian setting are a fitting tribute to Angela Christian’s beautiful story.

  • A is for Ampe: An Alphabet Book from Ghana

    Age Range: 2 – 5 years

    Pre-school – Grade 1

    A is for Ampe: An Alphabet Book from Ghana is a must-add book for youngsters’ home libraries as well as a must-purchase by day cares, kindergartens, early years classrooms and the children’s section of public libraries.

    In this well-designed alphabet book, the entire alphabet, in upper case, runs across the top of each page which has the focused-upon letter being presented in bolded, larger print. At the bottom of the page, the upper case letter appears in one corner and the lower case in the other. In between is the very brief text which follows a simple, standard pattern, eg. “D is for drum” or “T is for twins.” The objects used to represent the letters can be found in Hildebrand’s and Knowles’ full colour photos which occupy most of each page. Children will encounter the familiar, such as “E is for eggs” and “U is for umbrella,” but, as the short title indicates, they will also meet many new words. Hopefully, those adults who will be sharing this book with pre-readers will have, themselves, first read the book so that they will have discovered at the book’s conclusion the “Glossary of Ghanaian Words” in which Knowles, in addition to providing, where needed, a pronunciation guide, has explained eight Ghanaian terms, including the title’s “Ampe [AHM-pay]: A challenging game, usually played by girls, which involves jumping and clapping. The leading player tries to beat her opponent by the tactical placement of her left or right foot.”

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