The Little Frog Prince
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AuthorLiu Ching-Yen
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IllustratorSixty-Nine
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SeriesThe Slow Bloomers Collection
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ISBN9789869629379
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Format64 pages hardcover 21 x 29.7 cm
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Date2018-12-05
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Reading age3 years+
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PriceNT 300
About the Book
The story illustrates the symptoms of Tourette's syndrome and the difficulties that patients often encounter in the community. Through“understanding” and “empathy”readers will learn to treat individuals who are different from themselves without ridicule or negativity.
The princess was very worried after the birth of the little prince: “My little prince won't inherit the genes of a frog, right?” Nothing special happened at first, but as the days went by, the prince's symptoms of shaking his head became more and more obvious, and his classmates kept teasing him. The doctor suggested him to do sports, so the little prince began to enjoy swimming, and his best skill was the breast stroke!
The princess was about to faint when she heard this, but to her surprise, after the little prince started swimming, things gradually changed...
The princess was very worried after the birth of the little prince: “My little prince won't inherit the genes of a frog, right?” Nothing special happened at first, but as the days went by, the prince's symptoms of shaking his head became more and more obvious, and his classmates kept teasing him. The doctor suggested him to do sports, so the little prince began to enjoy swimming, and his best skill was the breast stroke!
The princess was about to faint when she heard this, but to her surprise, after the little prince started swimming, things gradually changed...
About the Author
Liu Ching-Yen
A journalist by training, Liu Ching-Yen has always maintained a love for children's literature. He spends most of his time translating and writing children's books. Liu Ching-Yen travels frequently both in Taiwan and abroad to speak to grownups who also love story books. He has also hosted a children's television program, winning a prize for best children's presenter in 2013. His greatest wish is to be a little magpie himself and spread the seed of reading around the globe.
A journalist by training, Liu Ching-Yen has always maintained a love for children's literature. He spends most of his time translating and writing children's books. Liu Ching-Yen travels frequently both in Taiwan and abroad to speak to grownups who also love story books. He has also hosted a children's television program, winning a prize for best children's presenter in 2013. His greatest wish is to be a little magpie himself and spread the seed of reading around the globe.
About the Illustrator
Sixty-Nine
A hearing-impaired illustrator whose pen name comes from his birthday, June 9, and the symbols 6 and 9 are often used to symbolize glasses, which also
signify the essence of Sixty-Nine’s illustration brand. Sixty-Nine has been deaf since he was a child. Without the interference of surrounding sounds, he is able to devote himself more to his illustrations. His illustration style is full of rusticity and a sense of life, with simplicity without losing delicacy, with a warmth in plainness.
A hearing-impaired illustrator whose pen name comes from his birthday, June 9, and the symbols 6 and 9 are often used to symbolize glasses, which also
signify the essence of Sixty-Nine’s illustration brand. Sixty-Nine has been deaf since he was a child. Without the interference of surrounding sounds, he is able to devote himself more to his illustrations. His illustration style is full of rusticity and a sense of life, with simplicity without losing delicacy, with a warmth in plainness.