Give your peanut a little encouragemint with this deliciously punderful board book for babies and toddlers, the perfect Valentine's Day gift
Show your little one you're berry proud of them with a sweet read aloud you'll love to share together again and again Filled with adorable food illustrations, funny wordplay, and a heartfelt message of positivity and encouragement, Donut Give Up introduces growth mindset to little ones and inspires them to believe in themselves. It's never too early to taco 'bout dreaming big and never giving up with your child
For fans of the USA Today bestseller I Love You Like No Otter, this is a pearfect self esteem and encouragement book for kids ages 0-3--made just for their little hands This punny treat makes a wonderful gift for baby showers, birthdays, graduation, Valentine's Day, Easter basket and holiday stocking stuffers, or other special moments all year long
Remember, donut give up when what you're doing gets tough.
And here's the inside scoop: You'll always be enough.
More charming stories from Punderland, the perfect gift for any occasion
I Love You Like No OtterYou Make My Heart Go Vroom I Love You More, BabysaurSomebunny Loves YouLet's Get This Potty Started and more"It had its Broadway premiere on March 19,1953, at the Martin Beck Theatre. The production was directed by Elia Kazan, with the assitance of Anna Sokolow."
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Yes, perhaps I'm biased, because I was in this play at my university and so the characters were all too real for me because my friends were playing them, but I really loved this story. The symbolism is just great and there's a lot of food for thought. Many people who came to see our production didn't understand the work, and I must admit, it is obscure and fairly difficult to understand. Don't let that get in your way...
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Anyone expecting Camino Real to be anything like the other plays Tennessee Williams wrote during the same period, such as Summer and Smoke or Cat on a Hot Tin Roof, will be puzzled. This is unlike anything else Williams wrote; it's nonlinear, overtly symbolic, lacking a conventional plot, and filled with images that don't make literal sense even as they speak directly to the subconscious. I think it could be Williams' most...
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all i have to say is: make voyages, attempt them, there's nothing else
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A truly bizarre plot line with equally bizarre settings and character developements. I read this play without completely understanding it (ok, in truth I didn't get it at all), but I think that it deserves further examination.
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