Oxford Reading Tree inFact: Level 10: Let's Make Comics! | TheBookSeekers

Oxford Reading Tree inFact: Level 10: Let's Make Comics!


Infact

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No. of pages 24

Reviews
Great for age 6-11 years
Let's Make Comics! shows you how to create your own comic strip. Discover how to tell a story with pictures, sound effects, captions and more! Oxford Reading Tree inFact is a non-fiction series that aims to engage children in reading for pleasure as powerfully as fiction does. The variety of topics means there are books to interest every child in this compelling series. The series is written by top children's authors and subject experts. The books are carefully levelled, making it easy to match every child to the right book.

 

This book features in the following series: Infact, Oxford Reading Tree-Infact .

. This book is part of a reading scheme, meaning that it is a book aimed at children who are learning to read.

There are 24 pages in this book. This is a comic book/graphic novel. This book was published 2014 by Oxford University Press .

Nikki Gamble is a lecturer, writer and directs the Write Away education consultancy. She is an evaluator for the Literature Matters project which aims to promote children's literature in initial teacher training courses. The Etherington brothers have been producing original comic material since 2003. The Etherington Brother's live show is loved by school children up and down the country and they often travel as far abroad as New Zealand and Singapore to perform! Both Robin and Lorenzo live in sunny Bristol. Lorenzo has a garden. Robin has mice.

This book is in the following series:

Infact
inFact - part of Oxford Reading Tree - is a set of distinctive non-fiction books and interactive eBooks which have been created to engage children in reading for pleasure as powerfully as fiction . The books are carefully levelled, covering book bands orange through to lime. They include a mix of personal accounts, lyrical writing and child-friendly biographies.

Oxford Reading Tree-Infact


Often individual series are part of a bigger set. The sub-series this book is in forms part of the following wider set:

Oxford Reading Tree

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