Disney Club Penguin Official Annual 2012 Book includes stickers and in the Club Penguin 2012 Annual Book you can read stories, find activities, Penguin puzzles, comics and all your favorite characters from www.clubpenguin.com! BUT is this REALLY the Book Cover they Plan to use? Where is the Brown Puffle…and how many stickers are “loads of sticker” that we can read on the Book Cover? Time will tell…
Facts:
Size :215 x 285mm Hardback Book with 64 pages and will be for sale Aug 4, 2011:)
Ask Aunt Arctic :)
Not only is Aunt Arctic editor-in-chief of The Club Penguin Times, she also gives advice to readers in her column “Ask Aunt Arctic.” She’s got the inside scoop on everything from the latest Club Penguin party to island secrets.We wanted to learn more about the penguin with all the answers, so we sat down in Aunt Arctic’s igloo to ask her questions – this time, about herself!
Q: Cool igloo! You’ve got a lot of interesting items in here. Do you enjoy collecting things?
Aunt Arctic: Indeed! Each of the things in my igloo tells a story and reminds me of something interesting that has happened.
Q: What do you like best about your igloo?
Aunt Arctic: There is no one best thing. My igloo is a place where I can relax after a long day of investigative reporting!
Q: Who is your best friend?
Aunt Arctic: Best friends, you mean! My puffles, of course.
Q: There’s always something fun to do on Club Penguin. What’s your favourite way to spend time?
Aunt Arctic: I love finding newsworthy stories to write about.
Thank you, Aunt Arctic.
Aunt Arctic: You’re welcome! I always enjoy answering questions.
A Meeting Mix-Up :)
Find Your Inner Penguin Poet :)
Roses are red
Violets are blue
Aunt Arctic is a writer
And you could be too!
Discover the penguin poet inside of you! Writing poems is a fun way to express how you feel about your favourite things in Club Penguin. Get started by learning about two different types of poems – haiku and limericks – and then try writing some of your own.
Haiku :)
Haiku is a form of Japanese poetry. (It also happens to be Sensei’s favourite kind!) The first and last lines of a haiku have five syllables; the middle line has seven. A syllable is the number of sounds, or beats, in each work. For example, penguin has two syllables: pen-guin. Here are some examples of haikus:
Jet Pack Adventure
Soaring through the skies
Collecting coins as we go
Watch out for anvils!
Brown Puffle
My super smart pet
Helps me with science homework
Can your dog do that?
Limericks :)
Limericks are five-line poems. In limericks, the first, second and fifth lines of the poem rhyme with each other, while the last works in lines three and four should rhyme, too. Here are some examples:
Cadence
Cadence grooves to her own special beat.
Some would say she’s got magical feet.
She’s the take of the town
When she dance around.
She’s the penguin we all want to meet!
Drilling Party
Some penguins are hoping to see,
The big Iceberg tip into the sea.
They dance and they jump,
They drill and the bump.
But the Iceberg’s as firm as can be.
Club Penguin: Official Annual 2011 :)
Under the Label TOYS you will find Much MORE Club Penguin Items and you can buy Club Penguin and Disney Toys, Books, Clothes and items on Disney Store :)
3 comments:
i agree with what you say about the cover saraapril. and 2012 aleready? they don't care about their products. just the money!
-Manbu3
Saraapril, in the "Where is the Brown Puffle" part, you missed the "H" in where. It'll be funny if you said "Were brown puffles" xD
~Yelley2061
Thanks Yelley2061 :) Typo Fixed :)
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