The sun is up, and it's a brand new day. Time to get ready for school! Hello Kitty and her twin sister, Mimmy, love going to school. Now you can join them as they count, color, and play!
It's no wonder why kids love Little Sound Books. This electronic picture book featuring Disney Pixar's Planes includes favorite characters, colorful pictures, and seven sound buttons. Character voices and story sounds make these already exciting stories even more fun to read.
Welcome to the magical world of Hello Kitty! Learn your alphabet with Hello Kitty, her twin sister Mimmy, and her super-cute friends in this gorgeous Hello Kitty ABC board book. Babies and toddlers will love the adorable pictures, and reading with your child will help them learn to recognise letters, from A to Z. This book is perfect for little Hello Kitty fans everywhere!
Dung Kai-cheung’s A Catalog of Such Stuff as Dreams Are Made On is a playful and imaginative glimpse into the consumerist dreamscape of late-nineties Hong Kong. First published in 1999, it comprises ninety-nine sketches of life just after the handover of the former British colony to China. Each of these stories in miniature begins from a piece of ephemera, usually consumer products or pop culture phenomena, and develops alternately comic and poignant snapshots of urban life. Dung’s sketches center on once-trendy items that evoke the world at the turn of the millennium, such as Hello Kitty, Final Fantasy VIII, a Windows 98 disk, a clamshell mobile phone, Air Jordans, and cargo shorts. The protagonist of each piece, typically a young woman, is struck by an odd, even overriding obsession with an object or fad. Characters embark on brief dalliances or relationships lasting no longer than the fashions that sparked them. Dung blends vivid everyday details—Portuguese egg tarts, Japanese TV shows, the Hong Kong subway—with situations that are often fantastical or preposterous. This catalog of vanished products illuminates how people use objects to define and even invent their own selves. A major work from one of Hong Kong’s most gifted and original writers, Dung’s archaeology of the end of the twentieth century speaks to perennial questions about consumerism, nostalgia, and identity.