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Product Description Bedtime reading is the best … and it can be both fun and educational. Does your child know how bugs help us? Do you? The Queen demands perfection, and after a bug bites her, she makes a proclamation: All bugs are banned from the kingdom! What will happen next? It isn’t what the Queen thinks. This delightfully illustrated children’s book uses wonderful verse to teach valuable lessons about saving the environment. Your child will love the humorous rhymes in “The Queen Who Banished Bugs,” and learn why bugs are important. And you might learn something, too. You’ll cherish the time you spend with your child and this book, because everyone wants a bright future for our planet. It starts with the bugs. Get it now. Review "Very clever little book!" Amazon reviewer "The message is simple but so very important and timely." Amazon reviewer "Fabulous and fun way to teach children the importance of pollinators!" Amazon reviewer "Captivating writing and the exquisite illustrations." Amazon reviewer "Terrific illustrations and smart rhymes." Amazon reviewer "As entertaining for adults to read as it is for children to hear." Amazon reviewer About the Author Ferris Robinson is the editor of the Lookout Mountain Mirror and the Signal Mountain Mirror, and is her work has been published in the Chicken Soup for the Soul series, The Christian Science Monitor and Spoonful magazine, as well as other publications. She is a past columnist for the Chattanooga News Free Press and chattanooogan.com. She graduated from Girls Preparatory School and UTC in Chattanooga. She lives with her husband and little dog on Lookout Mountain, the perfect distance from her three grown sons. Mary Ferris Kelly, the author's mother, picked up her paints after a long hiatus to illustrate this whimsical rhyming story that underscores "the creatures that have important roles in getting food to our plates, our cups, our bowls." Her sculptures, paintings and drawings are in permanent collections at the Whitney Museum in NYC and the Hunter Museum in Chattanooga, as well as in permanent collections all over the world.