How Billy Brown Saved The Queen
Billy Brown is mystified to learn that the Queen does not understand a maths
problem that is perfectly clear to him. It seems that nobody in the royal
household, at court or anywhere in the Queen's castles can explain the knotty
problem to Her Majesty. And so Billy decides that the kind thing would be to go
to the royal palace and explain it to her. He persuades his mother to drive him
all the way to the palace, and he makes his way right into the Queen's room and
sits down on her bed to explain all about fractions and division. And he
succeeds, where everyone before him has failed. The Queen is delighted. So
delighted that she becomes firm friends with Billy and his mum and even comes
to visit them in their humble abode ...
About the Author
Alison Healy has worked as a journalist with the Irish Times for almost 17
years, and with the Farmers Journal for eight years before that. She
specialises in food and farming issues and is currently on a career break. This
is her first children's book and she is also ghost writing the autobiography of
Anna May McHugh, managing director of the National Ploughing Championships. One
of her short stories, `Grace', was selected for the Stories for the Ear
compilation produced by Kildare Arts Service last October. She was also
shortlisted in Fish Publishing's Flash Fiction Awards announced earlier this
year."
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How Billy Brown Saved The Queen
How Billy Brown Saved The Queen
Billy Brown is mystified to learn that the Queen does not understand a maths
problem that is perfectly clear to him. It seems that nobody in the royal
household, at court or anywhere in the Queen's castles can explain the knotty
problem to Her Majesty. And so Billy decides that the kind thing would be to go
to the royal palace and explain it to her. He persuades his mother to drive him
all the way to the palace, and he makes his way right into the Queen's room and
sits down on her bed to explain all about fractions and division. And he
succeeds, where everyone before him has failed. The Queen is delighted. So
delighted that she becomes firm friends with Billy and his mum and even comes
to visit them in their humble abode ...
About the Author
Alison Healy has worked as a journalist with the Irish Times for almost 17
years, and with the Farmers Journal for eight years before that. She
specialises in food and farming issues and is currently on a career break. This
is her first children's book and she is also ghost writing the autobiography of
Anna May McHugh, managing director of the National Ploughing Championships. One
of her short stories, `Grace', was selected for the Stories for the Ear
compilation produced by Kildare Arts Service last October. She was also
shortlisted in Fish Publishing's Flash Fiction Awards announced earlier this
year."
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Description
Billy Brown is mystified to learn that the Queen does not understand a maths
problem that is perfectly clear to him. It seems that nobody in the royal
household, at court or anywhere in the Queen's castles can explain the knotty
problem to Her Majesty. And so Billy decides that the kind thing would be to go
to the royal palace and explain it to her. He persuades his mother to drive him
all the way to the palace, and he makes his way right into the Queen's room and
sits down on her bed to explain all about fractions and division. And he
succeeds, where everyone before him has failed. The Queen is delighted. So
delighted that she becomes firm friends with Billy and his mum and even comes
to visit them in their humble abode ...
About the Author
Alison Healy has worked as a journalist with the Irish Times for almost 17
years, and with the Farmers Journal for eight years before that. She
specialises in food and farming issues and is currently on a career break. This
is her first children's book and she is also ghost writing the autobiography of
Anna May McHugh, managing director of the National Ploughing Championships. One
of her short stories, `Grace', was selected for the Stories for the Ear
compilation produced by Kildare Arts Service last October. She was also
shortlisted in Fish Publishing's Flash Fiction Awards announced earlier this
year."











