Celebrate Milne's Classic Poems and Stories - Perfect Collection for Younger Fans
Christopher Robin received a toy bear for his first birthday which he named Winnie-the-Pooh. Together, Christopher and Pooh formed one of the greatest friendships of children's literature; embarking on extraordinary adventures with their friends in the Hundred Acre Wood. This edition showcases their most exciting encounters and treasured moments.
Celebrate Milne's Classic Poems and Stories - Perfect Collection for Younger Fans
Christopher Robin received a toy bear for his first birthday which he named Winnie-the-Pooh. Together, Christopher and Pooh formed one of the greatest friendships of children's literature; embarking on extraordinary adventures with their friends in the Hundred Acre Wood. This edition showcases their most exciting encounters and treasured moments.
Join Christopher Robin on his adventures with Winnie-the-Pooh and their friends from the Hundred Acre Wood. This charming collection of stories and poems, selected from A.A. Milne's Winnie-the-Pooh, The House at Pooh Corner, When We Were Very Young & Now We Are Six, tells extraordinary tales of a Boy and his Bear, accompanied by E.H.Shepard's beautiful illustrations. Milne's classic children's stories - featuring Piglet, Eeyore and, of course, Pooh himself - are both heart-warming and funny, teaching lessons of friendship and reflecting the power of a child's imagination like no other story before or since.
A.A. Milne grew up in a school - his parents ran Henley House in Kilburn, for young boys - but never intended to be a children's writer. Pooh he saw as a pleasant sideline to his main career as a playwright and regular scribe for the satirical literary magazine, Punch.
Observations of little Christopher led Milne to produce a book of children's poetry, When We Were Very Young, in 1924, and in 1926 the seminal Winnie-the-Pooh. More poems followed in Now We Are Six (1927) and Pooh returned in The House at Pooh Corner (1928). After that, in spite of enthusiastic demand, Milne declined to write any more children's stories as he felt that, with his son growing up, they would now only be copies based on a memory.
E. H. Shepard famously illustrated both 'Winnie-the-Pooh' and 'The Wind in the Willows' though, like A A Milne, much of his career was devoted to work for the satirical magazine Punch. To do the illustrations for 'Winnie-the-Pooh', Shepard observed the real Christopher Robin Milne, but not the real Pooh. The bear in the pictures is in fact based on Growler, a toy belonging to Shepard's own son.
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