Download Free Little Titch The Small Engine Book in PDF and EPUB Free Download. You can read online Little Titch The Small Engine and write the review.

Say hello to Little Titch, the small engine with a big heart. Little Titch feels very small next to his good friend, the kind and very big engine, Gideon. But when Gideon forgets something important, it's up to the littlest of little engines to save the day...
Meet all the engines, characters big and small, in this collection of all six stories from The Engine Series. Puff along with engines: Little Titch, Gideon, Toc Toc, Rust Bucket, Sally Steamy and not forgetting, Minnie Millie the engine lookerafterer.
Minnie Millie is the station cleaner who likes to look after her engine friends. But her friends, Little Titch and Gideon want to know just who is it who controls all the Mainland engines. To find out, they must go all the way to the Big City, where
Gideon is a big, kind engine with a huge crane arm. But when he meets an even bigger engine, Massive Mandy - she is always very rude to him. With the help of his friends, can Gideon somehow find the softer side of the bad-tempered engine..'
Rust Bucket is an old engine who lives on a lost railway. Little Titch wakes up on an old, rusty railway track. He doesn't know where he is or how he even came to be there. Back home, Gideon and Minnie Millie desperately search for their friend. Can
Toc Toc is a clockwork engine who holds the secret to the tick and the tock. Little Titch, Gideon and Minnie Millie come to the Clockwork Village with a cog, spindle and wheel to fix the Great Clock. But what lies behind the towering clock face? And why, for a clockwork village, is there neither a tick nor a tock..'
Sally Steamy is an engine who doesn't seem to like Christmas at all. Sally wants to keep herself busy and believe Christmas is just another day. Can Little Titch and a magical Christmas adventure somehow change her mind..'
Little Titch and Gideon snuggle up for a bedtime story. And Minnie Millie tells her engines a story of a clockwork engine coming to life and of a clockmaker trying to make the Great Clock work in time before the Clockwork Village itself runs out of its tick and its tock.
This little book of collected short stories looks 'out of the window' onto many different scenes: the town of Chatham in the 1850's; a smuggling ship trying to make land; the 10th Cavalry in the Dakota Territories; a high ranking T'ang dynasty Chinese lady coping with the death of her husband; an archaeologist on a newly opened planet making a major discovery; a Valentines card which manages to travel 50 years into the past; a warrior elf banished into a world with no magic and the answer to the question of 'will the ghost of a medieval abbey appear this Midsummer'?
The Isle of Sheppey sits just off the north coast of Kent, where the Medway and Thames estuaries flow into the North Sea. Over centuries this was a place that was home to farmland, castles, a dock yard, an air station, industrial installations, calm beaches and a population of islanders who have taken a pride in their home. To serve the needs of all of this a small railway network was built up and even an urban tram network. Included in this was a fixed link that was the first to ever link the island to the mainland. From 1860 the network grew as the importance of the island grew. Continental boat passengers, dockyard workmen and day trippers, they were all carried on the trains and trams that shuttled about to, from and across the flat terrain of this often overlooked island. Being an island can create its own unique set of challenges and the railways on the island were certainly challenged by misfortune and circumstances, but the little network kept going until economics got the better of it and from there on it becomes a story of contractions and closure. The Island can still boast a railway today but it is far removed from the story of its past. This work seeks to tell the story of the railways on the island, how they came to be built, how they were run and how times changed over the following decades.