Dolphinbooksellers.co.uk

Retail children's books from great authors and illustrators - securely delivered by Amazon.co.uk

We never see your personal or financial details...ever!  Click and buy with real confidence. The DolphinBooks Team

 

 

Office & Central Book Storage

SmithMartin Partnership LLP

Carthouse 3

Copley Hill Business Park

Babraham, Cambridge

CB22 3GN

Offices in London, Cambridge and Sheffield     Tel. 01223 839644    Email. sales  @  dolphinbooksellers.co.uk   Fax. 020 7900 2024

We are part of SmithMartin LLP  - read more here

Here are more books, literacy and supply projects that we deliver.

Using our extensive publisher's wholesale accounts, we supply books directly to schools, charities,

community organisations and all local authority settings.

Ask us to quote at anytime.

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This web site and its content designed and built by Thirdsectorweb.co.uk

Part of SmithMartin LLP

News and updates

from our Book Blog

                       

The panel below contains a newsfeed from The Dolphin Book Blog. Here you will find news and reviews, book events The Dolphin is supporting and information about authors and illustrators.

 

If you share our enthusiasm for the best in children's books leave a comment on our blog or subscribe to our newsfeed.

Little One We Knew You'd Come

by Sally L Jones and Jackie Morris

 

Maisy's Christmas Sticker Book 

by Lucy Cousins


Grace at Christmas

by Mary Hoffman

 

Dolphin featured books

What we do with the small surpluses we make from every retail book sale:

Your purchases will contribute funds to our current Support Project - helping children in other countries with books and resources.


In 2011/2012 we are helping  Kalpana, a girl aged 6 who lives in a village in Nepal, to go to school. We send money every month to support Kalpana's learning.

 

You can see the other literacy and learning projects we encourage below, or read our about us page to see what makes The Dolphin tick. Do visit us again, thank you.

If we're all online now - why read?

Some insights and comments into the durable impact of the printed word. Perhaps we don't think about it enough...?