Available Formats
Hardback
Published: 1st January 2065
Hardback, PRH Australia edition
Published: 16th January 2024
Paperback
Published: 21st February 2023
Paperback
Published: 22nd May 2018
Mr. Men Little Miss: Adventure with Knights (Mr. Men and Little Miss Adventures)
By (Author) Roger Hargreaves
HarperCollins Publishers
Farshore
22nd May 2018
United Kingdom
Children
Fiction
823.92
Paperback
32
Width 250mm, Height 230mm, Spine 2mm
150g
There is a medieval tournament at Sir Lances castle and Mr Uppity and his friends are invited. How will the Mr Men fare with the heavy armour, jousting and sword fighting and will they rise to the challenge when a fire-breathing dragon arrives
With a fun facts page about knights and castles with a Mr Men twist!
The Mr Men and Little Miss Adventures take Roger Hargreaves beloved characters on amazing trips to other worlds and different times where they have all kinds of funny and exciting escapades.
The books are a new larger format, so that you can enjoy their inimitable stories in even greater scale. Bold illustrations and funny stories make Mr Men and Little Miss the perfect story time experience for children aged two and up.
Have you collected all the Adventures:
Mr. Men Adventure with Dinosaurs
Mr. Men Adventure in Egypt
Mr. Men Adventure with Knights
Mr. Men Adventure with Pirates
It all started with a tickle. Roger Hargreaves son Adam asked him what a tickle looked like. In response, Roger drew a small orange man with extraordinarily long arms that could reach anywhere and tickle anyone. Mr Tickle, the first of the Mr Men, was born. Mr Tickle was soon joined by Mr Greedy, Mr Happy, Mr Nosey, Mr Sneeze and Mr Bump. The books were an instant hit and Roger went on to create many more Mr Men and Little Miss characters. What Roger really wanted was to make children laugh, which is probably why his own favourite character is Mr Silly.
The colourful characters have been delighting children since Mr Tickle first appeared on bookshelves in 1971.', The Independent
'The timeless Mr Men books capture modern stereotypes perfectly.', The Telegraph
'The Mr Men and Little Miss characters remain a cultural phenomenon, whose impact is felt far beyond the nursery bookshelf.', The Telegraph
It all started with a tickle. Roger Hargreaves son Adam asked him what a tickle looked like. In response, Roger drew a small orange man with extraordinarily long arms that could reach anywhere and tickle anyone. The idea that a tickle could be a character in its own right sparked an idea in Rogers mind.
Roger was a successful copywriter but he wanted to do something that would enable him to work from home and spend more time with his four children