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iTRACK Education specialise in teaching resources and providing digital pupil tracking systems for schools, including your SEND community.

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iTRACK Education specialise in teaching resources and providing digital pupil tracking systems for schools, including your SEND community.
Year 5/6 Grammar, Literacy/English, Adverbs worksheets
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Year 5/6 Grammar, Literacy/English, Adverbs worksheets

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3 worksheets focuses on the teaching of adverbs Sheet 1: to revise adverbs of manner Sheet 2: to revise adverbs of time, frequency and place. Sheet 3: to investigate how adverbs can affect adjectives Taken from Grammar and Creativity Year 6 (by LCP) Clear sheets that have instructions so easily to follow. Leave a review
Year 2: English/Literacy Guided Reading- Encouraging talk about non-fiction texts.
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Year 2: English/Literacy Guided Reading- Encouraging talk about non-fiction texts.

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The titles of the 5 texts include 1 Numbers 2 Owls 3 Running 4 Boats through history 5 Maps The cards primarily address text-level objectives for each year group and focus specifically on reading comprehension of non-fiction texts. The cards are designed to encourage talk and develop listening and speaking skills. There is a main text on the front of each of the reading cards. The main text is followed by talk time , where there are open-ended questions, which are designed to stimulate a personal response to the issues raised and encourage children to think about the card’s theme. The questions encourage discussion between two to six people. Talk time questions that are preceded by a require children to refer back to the text and are suitable for prompting children’s written responses. The box contains an interesting fact related to the card’s theme. This should appeal to the children’s sense of wonder and fascination for the remarkable. The reverse side of each card carries things to do box. This contains activities and challenges that are designed to enable children to pursue the main theme still further. The activities are mainly practical in nature, so that all children can succeed, whatever their levels of literacy Leave a review
EAL resource- Names of the Body
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EAL resource- Names of the Body

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Racing to English Great resources for teaching English as an additional language. Free resource includes :- Set of photo cards and matching words. Picture Dictionary Sheet. Worksheets for oral and written work. If you are looking for a comprehensive English as an Additional language resource then see the full Racing to English resource on LCP’s website. For now, this is a great freebie that we wanted to share. Let us know what you think …
Year 5 English Spelling, Grammar and Creativity (Full book 71 sheets)includes Answers Home learning.
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Year 5 English Spelling, Grammar and Creativity (Full book 71 sheets)includes Answers Home learning.

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Grammar and Creativity for Year 5 Good writing may start with an exciting idea, but it needs structure to make sense to a reader. Grammar provides a framework on which to display the imagination. Writing brings together individual expression and an understanding of the rules that allow our language (any language) to make sense. This book has been written with the view that grammar and creativity go hand in hand to produce good writing. Developing children’s understanding of the basics of English will encourage their literary adventures. The range of activities here has been designed to excite interest as well as guide children and teachers through the rules. The guide is organised in an incremental way, later tasks being built on earlier ones. Step by step, each exercise calls upon skills and terminology already explored. In this way, both the child and their teacher will develop a sense of the progress being made. At any particular age, of course, children will be working at different levels and may need either more fundamental or more challenging work set for them The guide has three main sections: word, sentence (including punctuation) and text. Each section has an introductory page which can be enlarged to create an explanatory poster for display purposes. At the end, there is a glossary explaining the terminology used in the book, as well as an answer section. Leave a review
Year 5/6 Grammar, English/ Literacy, Commas Worksheets
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Year 5/6 Grammar, English/ Literacy, Commas Worksheets

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4 worksheets and 1 poster Designed to support the teaching of Commas. Sheet 1: to revise commas and full stops. Sheet 2: to explore the ways commas help to create meaning in a sentence. Sheet 3: to use commas to avoid ambiguity Sheet 4: to use commas to punctuate speech Taken from LCP’s Grammar and Creativity Year 5 book. Leave a review
Year 4 Grammar, English/Literacy, Clauses Worksheets
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Year 4 Grammar, English/Literacy, Clauses Worksheets

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Includes Poster: Understanding Clauses – explanation. Sheet 1: Clauses – to identify the main clause and subordinate clause. Sheet 2: Clauses Challenge – to add a main clause to complete a sentence. Sheet 3: Clauses Challenge – to create complex sentences by adding subordinate clauses. Sheet 4: Relative Pronouns – to recognise and use relative pronouns. Sheet 5: Relative Pronoun Challenge – to drop in clauses beginning with who, when, where, which, that. Taken from LCP’s Grammar and Creativity Year 4 book Easy to follow Leave a review
Year 5/6 English/Literacy unit, Tales from other Cultures and traditions-Journey to Jo’burg
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Year 5/6 English/Literacy unit, Tales from other Cultures and traditions-Journey to Jo’burg

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Includes lesson plans and resources. Taken from our Literacy Upper Keystage 2 Resource File Tales from other cultures and traditions Lesson:1 Once upon a time… (two versions of Red Riding Hood) LO: To find similarities and differences between two stories Lesson 2: Would you trust this wolf? LO: Speak and write in a persuasive way and use speech marks with other punctuation. Lesson 3: Creating word pictures LO: Use similes and metaphors to make writing interesting Lesson 4: The real Mr Wolf LO: To recognise that stories change when told from a different perspective Lesson 5 Journey to Jo’burg LO: Find out about life in other countries by reading stories. • Make notes about characters and places Lesson 6: In Johannesburg LO: Read between the lines’ in stories. Write newspaper articles and letters from different viewpoints. Lesson 7: Going home LO: Discuss important issues found in stories. Make notes on both sides of an argument. Lesson 8: Inspiration for Journey to Jo’burg LO: Match an author’s experiences to scenes and characters in their stories. This fiction unit explores some stories from other cultures. In reading stories from a variety of cultures and traditions, children are encouraged to see differences in relationships, customs and attitudes and use of language. Children will identify points of view and plan and retell a story from alternative viewpoints. They will also précise texts and rewrite them as letters, dialogue or newspaper articles. There will be opportunities to discuss the motives of both the characters and the story tellers. The first four lessons focus on versions of the familiar European folk tale ‘Red Riding Hood’. The last four lessons analyse a children’s novel - Journey to Jo’burg written by a South African author in the 1980s. As one focus of this unit is on story illustrations, it might be useful to link with Art and design lessons and invite a professional illustrator into school. Leave a review
Year 5/6 English, Non-fiction, Persuasion and Argument Unit
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Year 5/6 English, Non-fiction, Persuasion and Argument Unit

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This non-fiction unit looks at persuasion and argument. Children will read and evaluate texts intended to inform, protest, complain or persuade. In doing so, they will consider how the texts are set out and what language devices are used. They will notice the deliberate use of ambiguity, half-truth, bias; how opinion can be disguised to seem like fact; infer writers’ perspectives from what is written and from what is implied. Children will investigate the use of persuasive definitions, rhetorical questions, pandering and condescension. During the unit, children will write persuasive letters for real purposes, for example to put a point of view or comment on an emotive issue. The first two lessons focus on writing persuasively about environmental issues. The next two lessons look at formal and informal writing and at how to produce a balanced argument. In Lesson 5 the children will take part in a formal debate. The final lesson looks at a famous wartime speech by Winston Churchill. (This could be used separately during a history lesson.) Lesson 1: How big is your carbon footprint? • Evaluate texts intended to persuade. • Identify persuasive devices • Infer what is implied 2 Green letters• Know the features of a persuasive letter. 3 Exploring a controversial issue • To identify textual viewpoints – for, against and balanced. To explore the language and organisational features of texts presenting a specific argument/ point of view. 4 Comparing formal and informal texts • To identify and explore the features of formal and informal texts. • To listen for language variation in formal and informal contexts. • To employ the features and narrative techniques of formal and/or informal texts in their own writing 5 Establishing a viewpoint on a controversial issue • To participate in wholeclass debate using the conventions and language of debate, including Standard English. • To identify the ways spoken language varies according to differences in the context and purpose of its use. Analysing a famous speech • Listen to and understand a speech. • Recognise the use of repetition and emotive language. Leave a review
Phase 5 Fairy tales Reading and Writing Unit
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Phase 5 Fairy tales Reading and Writing Unit

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Includes all stories An alternative version of the traditional fairytale ‘Little Red Riding Hood’. This quite challenging text uses a range of alternative graphemes from Letters and Sounds Phase 5. The premise for this story is that our monster family would probably not have heard of ‘Little Red Riding Hood’, a story with a bad wolf and a good child, but they may have a similar story which they tell their monster children, in which the monster is the good character and the villain is the child. Covering: Speaking and listening ● Help the children to draw a storyboard or story map to support a retelling of the story. ● Provide fabrics, blocks and smallworld resources to create a threedimensional story map. ● Use role play to tell the story from one point of view. To explore ideas for this, use drama techniques, such as ‘hot-seating’. ● Act out either the monster version of the story or the traditional version, using voices for the characters. Guided and shared reading: ● Use the story as a shared text. Support the children as they read words which contain alternative spellings for phonemes (see table, below). ● Compare and contrast this version with a traditional version of Red Riding Hood (see ‘Resources’, page 91). ● Traditional tales are some of the easiest texts to use when asking young children Assessment Focus 7 questions (Relate texts to social, cultural and historical contexts and literary traditions) as it is relatively easy to find simple retellings that the children can read independently. For example, you could ask: ● How did you know that the boy would do something bad? ● Did anything surprise you in this retelling of the story?
MFL- Spanish- Days of the Week
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MFL- Spanish- Days of the Week

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The purpose of this topic is to teach children to understand and say the days of the week. It is also to ensure that the children can respond to and ask the question ¿Qué día es hoy? Learning outcomes Children learn: to understand and use the vocabulary for the days of the week to ask and respond to the question ¿Qué día es hoy Includes: Lesson Plans and Activity Sheets
MFL-Spanish-4 Week Unit- Dates, Family, Colours, Sounds and Spellings
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MFL-Spanish-4 Week Unit- Dates, Family, Colours, Sounds and Spellings

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In this section, the children will learn the nouns for members of a family and how to say the date. They will also learn how to describe using colours, to express preferences and to look carefully at some Spanish words for their sound and spelling. **Topic titles My family** The purpose of this topic is for children to identify members of their family, to respond to questions and to write short phrases correctly with support. **2. Today’s date ** The purpose of this topic is for children to ask and respond correctly to the question ¿Qué día es hoy? It is also to understand and use the numbers 22–31. 3. Colours ** The purpose of this topic is for children to learn vocabulary to describe the colour of items. ** 4. Sounds and spellings The purpose of this topic is to consolidate and apply the phonetic skills the children have learnt in this and in other sections by looking specifically at the sounds and spellings of words Includes: Medium Term Plans, Lesson Plans and Activity Sheets Topic 1 and 2 available on TES or on our website.
Year 6 Maths Homework Pack (46 sheets) including answers
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Year 6 Maths Homework Pack (46 sheets) including answers

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The main purpose of this Mathematics Homework is to make your life, as a teacher of Year 6 pupils, as easy as possible. All of the homework activities are based on the renewed Primary Framework for mathematics; however, as they assess specific learning objectives they can be used in conjunction with other planned teaching schemes. Each homework activity sheet addresses a whole, or part of, a learning objective. The questions are written to test the understanding of your pupils once they have worked on a topic in the lesson. This in turn, will provide you with the information required to assess the pupils’ learning, and will enable you to plan your lessons effectively. With a full set of answers included you can be confident that your students are getting regular, relevant homework that tests their understanding across the Year 6 objectives and all seven core strands. This easy-to-use CD will reduce the time spent preparing and marking homework enabling you use your time as efficiently as possible. The Year 6 curriculum is structured into five blocks, reflecting the same structure as the other primary year groups. Each block is made up of three units, and each unit represents two or three weeks of teaching. The blocks are: • Block A: Counting, partitioning and calculating • Block B: Securing number facts, understanding shape • Block C: Handling data and measures • Block D: Calculating, measuring and understanding shape • Block E: Securing number facts, relationships and calculating
Year 3 English/Literacy Full Home Learning Pack (46 sheets) including Parental Guidance
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Year 3 English/Literacy Full Home Learning Pack (46 sheets) including Parental Guidance

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Our Literacy Homework Activities for Year 3 provide forty-six challenging and engaging Literacy homework activity sheets. The activity sheets are structured around the narrative, non-fiction and poetry blocks of the new literacy Framework. The content comes from common Year 3 fiction and non-fiction themes. The activities are designed to support work done across the curriculum as well as in literacy teaching. The activities follow the main literacy priorities in Year 3 and are designed to be used flexibly. Each activity sheet has a clear focus and advice to the adult as well as the child. There are four main types: • Understanding and engaging with texts; • Shaping texts; • Sentence structure and punctuation; • Spelling. Each unit contains a mixture of the activity types. They include parental guidance and spelling sheets, especially for Year 3 pupils. The Homework Sheets are in Microsoft® Word format and the activities also covers speaking and listening skills.
Year 5 English Spelling, Grammar and Creativity (15 sheets) includes Answers Home learning.
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Year 5 English Spelling, Grammar and Creativity (15 sheets) includes Answers Home learning.

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Get 15 sheets or the whole book via our TES shop 5 sheets with Answers Alphabet – to put words into alphabetical order. Root Words – to extend my vocabulary using root words. Homophones – to investigate homophones. . Noun Phrases – to expand single nouns to noun phrases. Adjectives – to identify adjectives not placed next to a noun. Description – to use descriptive words to create a picture in the reader’s mind. Prefixes – to build words by adding prefixes: tele, circum, bi, trans. Verbs – to revise word classes – verbs. Verbs Challenge – to change the tense of verbs. Prefixes – to add prefixes to verbs: dis, de, over. Suffix Challenge – to change verbs into nouns using suffixes: tion, sion. Suffixes – to change nouns into verbs using suffixes: ate, ise, ify . Prepositions – to identify and use prepositions. Adverbs – to revise word classes – adverbs. Word Class Challenge – to revise word classes – adjectives, adverbs and nouns in similes. Taken from: Grammar and Creativity for Year 5 Good writing may start with an exciting idea, but it needs structure to make sense to a reader. Grammar provides a framework on which to display the imagination. Writing brings together individual expression and an understanding of the rules that allow our language (any language) to make sense. This book has been written with the view that grammar and creativity go hand in hand to produce good writing. Developing children’s understanding of the basics of English will encourage their literary adventures. The range of activities here has been designed to excite interest as well as guide children and teachers through the rules. Leave a review
Year 5/6, English, Fiction from our Literacy Heritage, Treasure Island Unit
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Year 5/6, English, Fiction from our Literacy Heritage, Treasure Island Unit

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6 lessons includes plans and resources The children will be encouraged to use reading journals to record their thoughts, predictions, questions and notes. To widen their experience they will be given opportunities to read extracts aloud and to watch excerpts from television or film adaptations. They will explore the relationships between characters and the language and techniques used to present these relationships and develop the plot. The children will work in pairs or groups, as well as a whole class and will discuss the techniques they use to help them understand the text, such as prediction, empathy and visualisation, using a story mountain. Finally, they will be supported in writing in the style of the author to rewrite a chapter or write a new one. These lessons use Treasure Island by Robert Louis Stevenson (1850-94) as the focus text. It will be helpful to have begun reading it as a class before starting this unit and to have finished it before the third lesson. This will enable children to delve more deeply into the plot, characterisation, language and structure. 1 Treasure!• To use technical vocabulary to talk about pirates Notes on ‘the old sea dog’ • To draw picture notes of the main parts of the story 3.Long John Silver • To study dialogue between main characters to recognise how character can affect their behaviour. The book versus the film• To compare film and print versions of the same scene 5 Mapping the story • To outline key events in a story’s structure A missing chapter • To continue a story in the style of the author Leave a review
MFL-Spanish-Where Do You Live Lesson?-FREE
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MFL-Spanish-Where Do You Live Lesson?-FREE

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The purpose of this topic is to teach and ensure that children can respond to the question ¿Dónde vives? Children should also be able to ask others the same question and to understand the response. Learning objectives Children learn: to say where they live to ask others where they live Learning outcomes Children learn: to use a set phrase to respond to the question, for example Vivo en Lincoln to substitute items in the model phrase to vary the statement to take part in a brief prepared task using visual clues to help them initiate and respond to show understanding of short wordprocessed dialogue, made up of familiar language Includes: Lesson Plan and Activity Sheets Like this? Check out the full units available on TES or our website
Spelling Games KS2 (Year 3,4,5,6) 'long E' sound
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Spelling Games KS2 (Year 3,4,5,6) 'long E' sound

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FREE Phonics Resource takes a look at the long E sound. Designed for KS2 children who didn’t quite grasp phonics in KS1 … although perfect for any child who needs phonics help. If you want more, there is an interactive CD (PHONICS to SPELLING by Charlotte Raby) that is filled with excellent phonic activities, games etc. But for now, this a great resource to help instil phonics in a fun and memorable way. Like the resource? Leave us a review
Year 3 Spelling, Grammar and Creativity (15 sheets) including Answers (Great for Home learning)
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Year 3 Spelling, Grammar and Creativity (15 sheets) including Answers (Great for Home learning)

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Get the all 71 sheets via our TES shop 15 worksheets: Alphabet – to put words into alphabetical order. Dictionary – to understand that a dictionary gives the meaning of words. Word Families – to recognise members of a word family. Thesaurus – to use a thesaurus to find words with similar meanings. Thesaurus – to use a thesaurus to find words with similar meanings. Thesaurus – to use a thesaurus to find words with similar meanings. Adjectives – to identify adjectives. Adjectives – to experiment with adjectives. Adjectives Challenge – to experiment with adjectives. Determiners – to know when to use a and an. Prefixes – to understand what a prefix is and to recognise some common prefixes. Prefix Challenge – to understand what a prefix is and to recognise some common prefixes. Prefixes – to recognise some common prefixes. Prefix Challenge – to identify and use other prefixes. Suffixes – to identify and use the suffixes: ful and less. Suffix – ful Word Search. Taken from: Grammar and Creativity for Year 3 Good writing may start with an exciting idea, but it needs structure to make sense to a reader. Grammar provides a framework on which to display the imagination. Writing brings together individual expression and an understanding of the rules that allow our language (any language) to make sense. This book has been written with the view that grammar and creativity go hand in hand to produce good writing. Developing children’s understanding of the basics of English will encourage their literary adventures. The range of activities here has been designed to excite interest as well as guide children and teachers through the rules. Leave a review
EYFS/ Year 1 Phonics (Letters and Sounds Phase 4) includes texts and activities. Homelearning.
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EYFS/ Year 1 Phonics (Letters and Sounds Phase 4) includes texts and activities. Homelearning.

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Two units from Make Phonics Fun Each topic within Make Phonics Fun is supported by a range of lively and appealing pupil text. The two units are based around the theme of starting school and the weather. Includes fiction/ non-fiction text, vocabularly words and activities based on the texts. Across the different genres, children are introduced through the fiction, non-fiction and poetry texts to a list of key words, enabling them to develop their decoding and blending skills. Real and pseudo words have been chosen to cover the grapheme-phoneme correspondences. Each topic is also supported by photocopiable, labelled picture scenes, providing visual cues for some of the key real and pseudo words to be tested. Care has been taken to ensure that the pictures representing the key pseudo words are of objects and items that are clearly meant to be imaginary. Leave a review.
Year 5/6 Guided Reading- Modern Fiction 7 lesson Unit (Compare and Contrast styles of texts)
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Year 5/6 Guided Reading- Modern Fiction 7 lesson Unit (Compare and Contrast styles of texts)

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Taken from our Upper Keystage 2 Literacy Resource File Includes all lessons and resources Lesson 1: Inside a story- LO: To identify a point of view Lesson 2: 2 Ways into a story- LO: To identify how different stories are opened. Lesson 3: Colin Thompson’s stories and characters- LO:Identify the main parts of a story and to create a character profile Lesson 4:Tell me a story- LO:To experiment with writing in different styles. Lesson 5: Comparing story openings by Michael Morpurgo- LO:Compare the openings of two stories by the same author and comment on what makes an effective opening. Lesson 6 : Does Tomas Believe in Unicorns- LO:To explore characterisation through drama. Lesson 7:Tomas and the librarian- LO: To use empathy to explore the character of Tomas About this unit There are six units on fiction in this file for years 5 and 6. The second unit focuses on the work of modern authors of children’s fiction. We have chosen to focus on Colin Thompson and Michael Morpurgo, but it is possible to repeat some of the activities using books by other authors with whom the children may be familiar, such as Roald Dahl and David Walliams. The children will examine the story structures and aspects of each author’s style and will have opportunities to write short stories of their own. They will be encouraged to explore various characters and situations through role play and will work towards writing and staging their own short plays. They will develop the habit of keeping a reading journal (on paper or screen) as a way of supporting and extending reading. The Michael Morpurgo lessons are more challenging and you may wish to use them later in Upper KS2 than those on Colin Thompson’s books. The unit focuses on Books by Colin Thompson, for example The Paradise Garden, The Paperbag Prince, Falling Angels, Sid the Mosquito and other wild stories and I Believe in Unicorns and Why the Whales Came by Michael Morpurgo. Leave a review