About this deal
Including insights from neurodiverse young people, the book also features bright two-colour illustrations from David O’Connell and dyslexia-friendly design. Back when his CBeebies show Get Well Soon launched in 2012, he said: "I've worked in a variety of different hospitals in lots of specialties. Ranj's first non-fiction book for children, How to Grow Up and Feel Amazing, shot straight into the Sunday Times bestseller chart and received glowing reviews. He has also contributed to a range of other programmes such as Inside Out, 5 News and Good Morning Britain.
Brain Power by Ranj Singh | Hachette UK
Singh is an NHS clinician, having trained in London and worked in several hospitals as a specialist in paediatric emergency medicine. He is best known as a celebrity dancer on the BBC One dance series Strictly Come Dancing, and co-creating and presenting the CBeebies show Get Well Soon from 2012 to 2015.Singh married Sulvinder Samra, a pharmacist, at a traditional Sikh ceremony in Nottingham in 2005, and divorced in 2011.
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In August 2018, it was announced that Singh would be a contestant on the sixteenth series of Strictly Come Dancing. Ranj has been an advocate for LGBTQ rights, especially among minorities, and won the Attitude TV Award in 2019 where he spoke about how "People from ethnic minorities, people of colour, or LGBT people are still at a slight disadvantage" in the media. Filled with easy-to-understand explanations, down-to-earth advice and cheeky illustrations, this growing-up guide by trusted paediatrician Dr Ranj is perfect for readers aged 10+ who want to discover the confidence to be the very best version of themselves. So I've put everything I've learned both from my career as an NHS doctor and my own life experiences into this twenty-first century guide to being a boy.He's also a contributor for ITV This Morning and Tonight, as well as BBC1's Morning Live, The One Show, and Inside Out. Its aim is to educate as well as entertain, and allow kids to learn about their bodies in health and sickness. From the team behind A Superpower Like Mine, comes an exciting new picture book to help you discover your superpower and celebrate the power to be YOU!
Get Well Soon - CBeebies - BBC Get Well Soon - CBeebies - BBC
It covers the obvious things like the physical changes you'll go through during puberty and adolescence (hello, pubic hair and voice breaking!
Ranjit "Ranj" Singh Sangha (born 26 June 1979) [1] [2] is a British doctor, television presenter, author and columnist. Ranj also appears regularly on various quiz shows and celebrity specials [8] and in 2017, he won BBC's Pointless Celebrities, alongside Hilary Jones. NHS paediatrician and Sunday Times bestselling author of How to Grow Up and Feel Amazing, Dr Ranj, is here to inspire ALL young readers to love themselves, however their brains work. Outside of his work on Television, Singh has become the author of two children's educational books: Food Fuel [12] and Skelebones, [13] a Sunday Times bestselling cookbook [14] and is a contributor and columnist for Al Jazeera, Attitude magazine and NetDoctor.