Available Formats
My First Moomin: Best Friends
By (Author) Tove Jansson
Penguin Random House Children's UK
Puffin
12th April 2023
6th April 2023
United Kingdom
Children
Fiction
Childrens / Teenage personal and social topics: Friends and friendships
Picture storybooks
Childrens / Teenage fiction: Fantasy
823.92
Board book
16
Width 197mm, Height 167mm, Spine 26mm
325g
Meet Moomintroll and all his best pals in this charming story all about friendship! My First Moomin is a delightful read-aloud collection of board book stories, perfect for the smallest Moomin fans. Meet Moomintroll and all his best pals in this charming story all about friendship! My First Moomin is a delightful read-aloud collection of board book stories, perfect for the smallest Moomin fans. Moomin is feeling glum - his best friend Snufkin has gone away for the winter, and nothing is any fun without him. Luckily Moomin's other friends are there to help him feel less lonely until Snufkin returns. With gorgeous illustrations and a soothing story, this is the perfect book to celebrate friendship. More beautiful Moomin books- My First Moomin- Goodnight Moomin Moomin and the Wishing Star Moomin and the Birthday Button Moomin- The Very BIG Moominhouse Lift-the-Flap Book
Tove Jansson was born in Finland in 1914. She began her career as a cartoonist and went on to write and illustrate many books for adults and children. She drew her first Moomin in the 1930s, just for fun, and in 1945 he became a character in a children's story. Tove became world-famous for her Moomin books, which began with The Moomins and the Great Flood in 1945, closely followed by Comet in Moominland in 1946, Finn Family Moomintroll in 1948 and six more Moomin adventures. During the winter months Tove lived and worked in Helsinki, but in the summertime she stayed on a beautiful remote island in the Gulf of Finland with her long-term partner, the artist Tuulikki Pietil . Tove Jansson received many prestigious awards during her lifetime, including the international Hans Christian Andersen Medal. She died in 2001, aged eighty-seven.