 Hello, I'm Catherine Rundle and I'm the author of Rooftoppers and The Good Thieves and The Explorer. And I have made a tiny book as part of the British Library's tiny book project, their tiny library. And you can find instructions to make the book on the website of the British Library. As you can see I didn't have all the things that you need for the book. I didn't have any coloured cards so instead I have used the front cover of the London Review of Books. And I've written a tiny story inside, just the beginning of one, called The Young Bird Catcher. I'm going to read it to Rainbow. Usually you might want to read it to your toys or to something very small, but the smallest thing that I have is Rainbow the Black Labrador. Chapter one. There is only one chapter. It was a year of extravagant fashions. Dresses for one with petticoats, so many that it was possible to hide a small dog in that rainbow. And two large squirrels under your skirts. Top hats were a full foot high. Robert, our hero, had one such top hat. He'd always felt ridiculous in it. But his uncle, who owned the bird shop, insisted. If you want to flog expensive nonsense to rich folk, he said, you've got to make them think you're one of them. Began with nothing special. But there I ran out of space because it really is a very tiny, tiny book. If you wanted to know the whole of the story, you can find it in a collection that I edited called The Book of Hope. If you Google it, it's free to read online. And I hope that you will make tiny books and that you will find tiny stories that fit inside them. Rainbow, what do you think? Did you enjoy that? I think it's a sort of two-star review from Rainbow.