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Inside Oxford Bookworms Library (42)
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Oxford Bookworms Library Stage 3 Go, Lovely Rose and Other Stories
H.E. Bates
Retold by Rosemary Border
STAGE 3 - Human Interest
A warm summer night. The moon shines down on the quiet houses and gardens. Everyone is asleep. Everyone except the man in pyjamas and slippers, standing on the wet grass at the end of his garden, watching and waiting . . .
In these three short stories, H. E. Bates presents ordinary people like you and me. But as we get to know them better, we see that their feelings are not at all ordinary. In fact, what happens to them - and in them - is passionate, and even extraordinary. Could this happen to you and me?
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Oxford Bookworms Library Stage 3 The Card
Arnold Bennett
Retold by Nick Bullard
STAGE 3 - Human Interest
Every town should have a 'card' - someone who gets talked about, someone who does mad and wonderful things, someone who makes you laugh.
Bursley in the Five Towns has a 'card': Edward Henry Machin (Denry for short). Denry begins life in a poor little house where the rent is twenty-three pence a week. But before he's thirty, he's made a lot of money, and had more adventures than you and I have had hot dinners. The town of Bursley never stops talking about him. Whatever will young Denry do next?
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Oxford Bookworms Library Stage 3 'Who, Sir? Me, Sir?'
K. M. Peyton
Retold by Diane Mowat
STAGE 3 - Human Interest
Sam Sylvester is a teacher who wants his class to have ambition, and to do great things in life. So he enters them for a sporting competition against the rich students of Greycoats School.
The team that he has chosen for the competition think Sam has gone crazy. 'Who, Sir? Me, Sir?' says little Hoomey, his eyes round with horror. 'We'll never beat Greycoats,' the others cry. 'Never in a million years!'
But you don't know what you can do
- until you try . . .
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Oxford Bookworms Library Stage 2 Stories from the Five Towns Audio CD Pack
Arnold Bennett
Retold by Nick Bullard
STAGE 2 - Human Interest
Arnold Bennett is famous for his stories about the Five Towns and the people who live there. They look and sound just like other people, and, like all of us, sometimes they do some very strange things. There's Sir Jee, who is a rich businessman. So why is he making a plan with a burglar? Then there is Toby Hall. Why does he decide to visit Number 11 Child Row, and who does he find there? And then there are the Hessian brothers and Annie Emery - and the little problem of twelve thousand pounds.
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Oxford Bookworms Library Stage 2 The Children of the New Forest Audio CD Pack
Captain Marryat
Retold by Rowena Akinyemi
STAGE 2 - Human Interest
England in 1647: King Charles is in prison, and Cromwell's men are fighting the King's men. These are dangerous times for everybody.
The four Beverley children have no parents; their mother is dead and their father died while fighting for the King. Now Cromwell's soldiers have come to burn the house - with the children in it.
The four of them escape into the New Forest - but how will they live? What will they eat? And will Cromwell's soldiers find them?
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Oxford Bookworms Library Stage 3 The Last Sherlock Holmes Story
Michael Dibdin
Retold by Rosalie Kerr
STAGE 3 - Crime & Mystery
For fifty years after Dr Watson's death, a packet of papers, written by the doctor himself, lay hidden in a locked box. The papers contained an extraordinary report of the case of Jack the Ripper and the horrible murders in the East End of London in 1888. The detective, of course, was the great Sherlock Holmes - but why was the report kept hidden for so long?
This is the story that Sir Arthur Conan Doyle never wrote. It is a strange and frightening tale . . .
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Oxford Bookworms Library Stage 3 The Railway Children
Edith Nesbit
Retold by John Escott
STAGE 3 - Human Interest
'We have to leave our house in London,' Mother said to the children. 'We're going to live in the country, in a little house near a railway line.'
And so begins a new life for Roberta, Peter, and Phyllis. They become the railway children - they know all the trains, Perks the station porter is their best friend, and they have many adventures on the railway line.
But why has their father had to go away? Where is he, and will he ever come back?
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Oxford Bookworms Library Stage 3 Tooth and Claw
Saki
Retold by Rosemary Border
STAGE 3 - Human Interest
Conradin is ten years old. He lives alone with his aunt. He has two big secrets. The first is that he hates his aunt. The second is that he keeps a small, wild animal in the garden shed. The animal has sharp, white teeth, and it loves fresh blood. Every night, Conradin prays to this animal and asks it to do one thing for him, just one thing.
This collection of short stories is clever, funny, and shows us 'Nature, red in tooth and claw'. In other words, it is Saki at his very best.
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Oxford Bookworms Library Stage 2 Matty Doolin
Catherine Cookson
Retold by Diane Mowat
STAGE 2 - Human Interest
Matty is fifteen and is leaving school in a few weeks' time. He wants to work with animals, and would like to get a job on a farm. But his parents say he's too young to leave home - he must stay in the town and get a job in ship-building, like his father. They also say he can't go on a camping holiday with his friends. And they say he can't keep his dog, Nelson, because Nelson barks all day and eats his father's shoes.
But it is because of Nelson that Matty
finds a new
life . . .
Useful and free
Oxford Bookworms Library Stage 2 Stories from the Five Towns
Arnold Bennett
Retold by Nick Bullard
STAGE 2 - Human Interest
Arnold Bennett is famous for his stories about the Five Towns and the people who live there. They look and sound just like other people, and, like all of us, sometimes they do some very strange things. There's Sir Jee, who is a rich businessman. So why is he making a plan with a burglar? Then there is Toby Hall. Why does he decide to visit Number 11 Child Row, and who does he find there? And then there are the Hessian brothers and Annie Emery - and the little problem of twelve thousand pounds.
