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French ABC Coloring Book: Color and Learn the French Alphabet

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This is a delightful purchase if you’re looking for a jumbo-sized book for your little one to learn the French alphabet. The adorable, large coloring book for young children (ages 4-6) is 8.5 x 11 inches in size and includes large illustrations, making it easy for little ones to color. Each letter is illustrated by a word and related, fun-filled drawing.

56 pages, Paperback

Published January 11, 2017

About the author

Camille Martin

86 books33 followers
Praise for Sonnets:

In these taut, fast-paced, self-aware poems, the lyric meets 21st century paranoia and sparks fly.
—Rae Armantrout

There is magnificence in these poems, a poetic magnetic, propelling you to turn the page.
—Jordan Scott

Camille Martin’s poems shimmer with repetition deft as sweetest breath mid-spring.
—Sheila E. Murphy

There’s none of the lyrical self-absorption one finds in too many collections. . . Martin has a very good ear, as in a fun, almost Hopkinsesque piece that flirts with nonsense, but stays syntactically coherent.
—Quill and Quire

There are so few who seem to know how to bring something new to an often-used form that when it happens, it’s worth noting, and such is the case with Camille Martin in Sonnets. Martin writes with the most wonderful sense of clarity, thought and play in these poems.
—rob mclennan

Sonnets is a delightful body of work. Even though we wander into the oblique there is never alienation. Incredible poetic craft.
—James Mc Laughlin, Stride Magazine

Can you pour new wine into old bottles? Well, if you are Camille Martin and the bottles are sonnets, the answer is an emphatic “Yes.”
—Carol Dorf, New Pages Book Reviews

Camille Martin is the author of Sonnets (Shearsman), Codes of Public Sleep (BookThug), and Sesame Kiosk (Potes & Poets). Recent poetry projects: “Looms,” a collection of layered narratives, and “The Evangeline Papers,” a poetic sequence based on her Acadian/Cajun heritage and her participation in archaeological digs at an eighteenth-century village in Nova Scotia (finds: ancestral pipes and wine bottles).

blog:
http://rogueembryo.wordpress.com

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