Nanny Mc Phee
Mr and Mrs Brown are always having great difficulty with their numerous and incredibly naughty children. They try all the agencies but the nurses, governesses and nannies never stay long with the Brown children. 'The person you want is Nurse Matilda,' they are told. And when Nurse Matilda does...
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Mr and Mrs Brown are always having great difficulty with their numerous and incredibly naughty children. They try all the agencies but the nurses, governesses and nannies never stay long with the Brown children. 'The person you want is Nurse Matilda,' they are told. And when Nurse Matilda does arrive very strange things begin to happen. Brought together in one volume are the three remarkable tales of Nurse Matilda - Nurse Matilda, Nurse Matilda Goes to Town and Nurse Matilda Goes to Hospital. Having delighted generations of readers since their first publication in the sixties, the books have now formed the inspiration for the newly-released and fabulous Nanny McPhee, written and adapted for the big screen by Emma Thompson who stars as Nanny McPhee opposite Colin Firth as Mr Brown. This collection of stories from Christianna Brand is sure to charm and entertain all readers new and old.
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ISBN:
9780747578994 (0747578990)
Edition language: English
Category:
Fantasy,
Young Adult,
Childrens,
Adventure,
Classics,
Humor,
Juvenile,
Media Tie In,
Movies,
Childrens Classics,
Short Stories
Series: Nurse Matilda -3 (#1)
This is pretty cute and the author's writing style is unique and fun, but I found that I only really enjoyed the first book in the series. The other two were pretty boring and repetitive. I do think it would be a fun book to read to children, spacing each book out so that it's more like revisiting a...
The three Nurse Matilda books that inspired the Nanny Mcphee movies together in one volume. Similar to the Mary Poppins books by P.L. Travers.
excellent Edwardian Mary Poppins-like stories. Like many other children's books of the era, the stories don't form a solid narrative arc. For that see the adaptation into Nanny McPhee. Unlike Mary Poppins, it doesn't seem to be suffering from distressingly racist assumptions.