Starting self-study with an English book for children is easier than any other method. It features colorful pictures, simple language, and important life messages for people of all ages. Therefore, I would like to introduce 7 sets of English books for children aged 3-7 to help your children learn English more easily and effectively.
National Edition (Family And Friends)

1) Think of it as your family group chat, but syndicated nationwide — fewer typos, more weather updates, and at least one uncle gets a fact-check.
2) It’s the Thanksgiving table conversation reissued as a deluxe box set: same drama, cleaner audio, and a bonus track where Grandma reviews everyone’s life choices.
3) Like a Christmas letter that hired a copy editor and bought Super Bowl ad time — intimate oversharing, now with nationwide distribution and suspiciously good graphics.
4) Imagine Friendsgiving produced by PBS: warm, politely educational, and funded by viewers like you — plus one tense segment about the casserole no one admits to burning.
English Fighting Good And Great

1) Think of it like British weather: “Good” English fighting is a persistent drizzle — annoying, serviceable, and gets the job done. “Great” English fighting is a full-on thunderstorm that ruins your picnic, steals your umbrella, and still gets five stars for atmosphere.
2) It’s tea versus tea with biscuits. “Good” English fighting is a nice cuppa — steady, reliable, warms the spirit. “Great” English fighting dunks a biscuit, times it perfectly, and somehow the biscuit doesn’t break. That’s precision, that’s courage, that’s crowd-pleasing crumb control.
3) Picture two pubs. “Good” English fighting is a firm word at closing time — respectable form, minimal spillage. “Great” English fighting is the landlord who ends the ruckus with a raised eyebrow, a bar towel, and a moral lesson. Efficient, elegant, and you still tip on the way out.
4) It’s Shakespeare versus a shopping list. “Good” English fighting hits its marks: subject, verb, object — all fine. “Great” English fighting delivers iambic pentameter with a right hook, leaves you quoting Act III while checking your dental coverage. Bravo, encore, and mind the soliloquy.