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Showing 18,051 through 18,075 of 18,239 results

Smuggler's Reef (Rick Brant, # #7)

by John Blaine

Smuggler's Reef finds Rick Brant and Don Scott tracking down a band of smugglers, operating in the north Atlantic. Using an infrared camera and sniperscope Rick traces the criminals, but each time they elude the grasp of the police: somehow the stolen goods vanish before they can be nailed. How Rick and Scotty are at last able to track down the smugglers makes for some fantastic, fast-paced reading.

Warren of West Point

by R. G. Emery

Larry Warren has to learn about self-confidence and friendship during his first year at West Point.

Wild Animals of the Southwest

by George Corey Franklin

A collection of short stories about some wild animals that can be found in the southwestern United States. Each takes a unique look at a different animal.

Wild Trek

by Jim Kjelgaard

AN UNFORGETTABLE SAGA OF COURAGE AND SURVIVAL. This is the story of the trapper, Link Stevens, and his fearless snow dog, Chiri. It began when the trapper and his dog set out to rescue a naturalist stranded in the perilous Caribou mountains — the impenetrable storm-blasted heights from which no man has ever returned. Forced to live by Stone Age methods, they relied on every resource of the dog’s wild cunning and the trappers woodlore. How they battled a killer cougar and bloodthirsty wolves, yet brought their man to safety, is a gripping, action-packed saga. It is also the stirring tale of the deep love between a loyal snow dog and his courageous trapper master.

The Black Opal

by Dorothy Maywood Bird

Laurel Stanwood hardly sets foot on Colbert's campus before her journalistic nose for news puts her on the trail of an historic murder mystery that has baffled professional sleuths since 1848. Her interest was aroused when Rue Sargeant told her about the bitter rivalry that existed between the girls' newspaper, the Feminist, and the boys' paper, the Iconoclast. Solving the murder mystery would be a scoop no one could top, not even the Iconoclast's, egghead editor, J. Swinton Towne. Though Laurel soon becomes engrossed in her new friends, studies, football games, and dances, the mystery persistently crops up--in her English term paper on the history of opals; during an outing when she discovers a saddlebag with the same name engraved on it as the name found on the murderer's gun; and in an incredible "lost" letter mailed by the victim the very night of the murder! Girls of today will enjoy this fast-moving story about life at a typical modern college--typical, that is, until Laurel pieces together the jigsaw puzzle of an extraordinary crime.

Bluegrass Champion (Famous Horse Stories)

by Dorothy Lyons

After their parents' deaths, two sisters are determined to fulfill their father's dream of turning their farm into a well-known name in the Saddlebred world. Gail Carter's lovely chestnut filly looks like a world beater, yet when she enters the ring never places. Judy's gelding, Harlequin Hullabaloo, is perfect in Judy's eyes, yet no judge can see past his colorful pinto markings. With their two horses, one whose chances are unpromising and the other an obvious winner, they set out to be champions. Unfortunately, the winner isn't as obvious as she seems, and an unpromising horse becomes an astounding winner when Judy Carter breaks the prejudice against pinto Saddlebreds and has a chance to win the World Five-gaited Championships with her wildly colored Hullabaloo.

A Boy Should Know How to Tie a Tie

by Antwone Fisher

LIFE LESSONS AND HARD-EARNED ADVICE THAT EVERY BOY NEEDS TO BECOME A MAN--AND EVERY MAN NEEDS TO BECOME A RESPECTED CITIZEN ANTWONE FISHER ALWAYS ADMIRED his foster father's crisp sartorial style. It wasn't until Fisher was a navy recruit that he realized this smartly dressed man had never taken the time to teach him how to be well-groomed--to reflect on the outside the man he was becoming on the inside. "A boy ought to know how to tie a tie," he thought angrily, as he struggled to master the navy's required half-Windsor knot. Filled with inspiring stories, wisdom, and practical know-how, A Boy Should Know How to Tie a Tie teaches: Basics of personal style and hygiene: why cleaning, trimming, and polishing are essential daily habits Key components of self-improvement: how to develop a routine for success and organize your personal space The importance of identity: why reinventing oneself is a necessary part of growing upWith additional information about healthy eating, making smart financial decisions, and finding role models, Antwone Fisher offers a book filled with accessible life lessons.

Cherry Ames at Spencer (Cherry Ames #10)

by Julie Tatham

Cherry returns to Spencer to work in the new children's wing, and helps exonerate a man falsely convicted of a pawnshop robbery.

The Christmas Horse (Tack Ranch #2)

by Glenn Balch

"He's no good. Not with a wild horse like King for a sire!" That's what Ben Darby's father thinks. But Ben believes in the little black colt. And he takes on the job of breaking and training the son of the wild stallion. It isn't easy. When Ben leaves the ranch to go to school in the city, the colt, Inky, goes too. Ben has to earn the money for Inky's keep. He has to get up winter mornings at 4:30 to ride him. Does Inky really have the stuff? Is he all that Ben believes him to be? The test comes the day Johnny Horn rides for the calf- roping championship - on Ben Darby's Christmas Horse.

The Complete Canasta

by Ralph Michaels Charles H. Goren Josefina Artayeta De Viel

This book teaches the reader how to play Canasta with 2, 4 or 6 people, and how to have a Canasta tournament.

Cotton in My Sack

by Lois Lenski

Picking enough cotton to fill the long sack means more money to spend in town on Saturday. Joanda knows what fun it is to spend the money she has earned herself; but she knows, too, what it means when the money is gone. Whatever happens, Joanda always shares in her family’s ups-and-downs, even when it means facing the mysterious loss of the load of cotton that was to mean the beginning of independence for the family.

The Green Island Mystery (Connie Blair, Book #5)

by Betsy Allen

A guest book, check stubs, and a torn photograph add up to a puzzling mystery on the island paradise of Bermuda. Connie Blair immerses herself in the very British world of Bermuda on another job assignment with her boss, Georgia Cameron. But who can you trust, and can business and pleasure mix?

Hit and Run

by Duane Decker

Chip Fiske was a nimble, place-hitting specialist, but his short stature haunted him all the way up from the bush leagues. Now that he was big-time, he still threw his Sunday punch at the first wisecrack . . . and there were plenty of them, because this crowd liked big fellows and long-ball clouts. Then Kennie Willard came along-even more of a lone wolf than Chip. For Kennie was a Negro, the first in the League, and slated strictly for the benches. These two youngsters help each other to become really "big league"-in spirit and in action. You'll call HIT AND RUN one of the best baseball stories Duane Decker has ever written.

Hound-Dog Man

by Fred Gipson

12-year-old Cotton is disappointed when he doesn't get a dog for Christmas. Then he bonds with a young hound while on a hunting trip with his friend and an unusual man named Blackie.

Kentucky Derby Winner (Famous Horse Stories)

by Isabel McLennan McMeekin

Many of the events in this book are true, though the author has introduced some fictional young people and their stories for interest. But it is true that in 1875, Aristides (Risty) truly won the very first Kentucky Derby at three years old. This is the story of the small but beautiful colt who became a winner, and young Jackie Spratt, the boy who loved and believed in him, no matter what the adults said.

Midnight: A Cow Pony

by S. P. Meek

This is a story of life on a working cattle ranch. The time is just after World War II, when modern practices and equipment were just making it out to the Texas panhandle cattle country. The ranch hands struggle with new ideas from a distant ranch owner, with training a green cowpuncher, also from back East, and the ornery horse Midnight has something to teach the cowboys.

The Mystery of the Gulls

by Phyllis A. Whitney

Taffy Saunders finds mystery and adventure on beautiful Mackinac Island, where her mother has unexpectedly inherited a hotel. A stipulation in the will states that Mrs. Saunders must manage the hotel successfully for a summer in order to gain title to it. Taffy and her mother arrive at Sunset House to find the little hotel enveloped in an atmosphere of mystery and antagonism. Celeste, the exotic and superstitious French-Indian cook, has gone on strike and the housekeeper and her daughter seem strange and unfriendly. But it is not until mysterious happenings scare the guests into leaving that Taffy realizes someone wants her mother to fail. Who? Why? These are the questions she tries to answer. Eerie gulls, a locked room, a Chinese gong ringing mysteriously in the night, and the initials J. B. are only a few of the clues that lead Taffy through thrilling and baffling episodes to an unexpected solution. Taffy's breath-taking adventures are surrounded by the fascinating color of historic Mackinac Island. Miss Whitney has captured the vacation atmosphere of the island, yet its battle days seem to return as Taffy and her friend David Marsh search for a missing key among the guns of the old fort.

Paintbox Summer

by Betty Cavanna

A Summer on Cape Cod! Summer... a girl's first love... romance! Kate Vale is looking forward to a dreary summer at home, when the chance comes to paint peasant furniture for Peter Hunt in his world- famous shop on Cape Cod. Kate sets off joyously, convinced this will show her parents her desire to go to art school is more than a teen-age whim. At Peasant Village, the Peter Hunt art colony, Kate makes friends with Misty and Rhoda, and lives in a wharf apartment that juts out over the bay. She falls head over heels in love with a handsome young Portuguese fisherman. But then there is Bill--just Bill, who is always there, and somehow becomes more and more a part of her life. Against a background of blue sky and sea, with white sails in the sun, a group of young people work and play, make friendships that will last a lifetime, and find the key to their careers under the guidance of the real Peter Hunt himself.

The Phantom Roan (Famous Horse Stories)

by Stephen Holt

The roan waved his foot back and forth in ceaseless pain. "I thought so," muttered Glenn. "It's a rock in the frog." He pulled a pocketknife from his levis. Sterilizing the blade in the fire, he probed for the rock. It came free--a three-cornered jagged piece of granite. And so begins a partnership of boy and horse that climaxes in the Rodeo in New York's Madison Square Garden.

The Phantom Shark (Rick Brant, # #6)

by John Blaine

This book, the sixth in the series, follows the adventures of Rick and Scotty as they travel to the Pacific Ocean with some other Spindirift scientists to map a part of the ocean. While out in the Pacific they become entangled with the fabled Phantom Shark, a vicious criminal who steals priceless pearls from divers and sells them on the black market. This Shark is bent on stopping Spindrift's mapping expedition and Rick and Scotty must find out why - and discover the real identity of the Phantom Shark.

Pilgrim Kate

by Hellen F. Daringer

This is a story of an English Separatist girl that still lived in Holland, before sailing on the Mayflower to the New World, who's family is neighbors and friends with William Brewster and William Bradford. At first Kate seems very young for her fifteen years, but in some ways this is a coming-of-age novel. She resents her elder sister Meg's growing friendship with a young man, who is a member of dissenters; but at the same time she becomes friends with the FitzHugh family, who have just moved into the neighborhood. When she accompanies Meg to a meeting, instead of attending the local church, Kate begins to understand the attraction of the Puritan cause. The story is full of interesting characters, in a believable setting.

Red Fox of the Kinapoo

by William Marshall Rush

This is a fictionalized account of the Nez Perce Indians of the Snake River country in Idaho during the years 1872-1877. It is presented through the perspective of John Child, a young Nez Perce, who has been educated by white teachers at a government school. When events take dangerous turns against his people, he joins Chief Joseph's band and returns to the old ways. In an ancient ceremony he becomes Red Fox of the Kinapoo. This is the moving story of a lost cause and a powerful portrayal of a courageous leader who fought for his people.

The Secret of Magnolia Manor (Vicki Barr, Book #4)

by Helen Wells

Vicki is reassigned to the New Orleans-to-Guatemala City run and stays with Paul Breaux and his daughter Marie in their home in New Orleans. Marie is engaged to young Bill Graham, who is renovating the old Breaux plantation, Magnolia Manor, for the man who has bought it. When Paul Breaux learns that the parlor wall will be torn down during the renovation, he becomes enraged and orders that the wall not be touched, thus straining his relationship with Marie's future husband. Paul Breaux appears to be greatly concerned about money, even though he recently received a large sum of money for the sale of Magnolia Manor. Why does he complain about his bills? Strange events begin to occur at Magnolia Manor. Bill Graham mysteriously disappears, and the caretaker sees a ghost in the manor. Vicki learns that the will which made Paul Breaux the executor of Marie's estate is likely not the only existing will and that another will may be hidden in Magnolia Manor. Vicki's search for Bill Graham and the missing will makes for an exciting conclusion to the mystery.

The Secret of Skeleton Island (Ken Holt, # #1)

by Bruce Campbell

In one of the most tense and exciting series books ever written, the young Ken Holt must elude the clutches of a dangerous ring of car thieves and at the same time rescue his kidnapped father. The action begins in Chapter 1 when Ken Holt is kidnapped, and doesn't let up a bit until the last chapter. This is one of the best Ken Holt books and is an example of why many think so highly of this series.

The Sign of the Golden Fish: A Story of the Cornish Fishermen in Maine (The Land of the Free Series)

by Gertrude Robinson

Adventures of a teenaged boy who jumped ship to bring to the colonies the Old World skill of fish-curing that had been the pride of the Tobey family for generations. Part of The Land of the Free series. An addition to the Land of the Free series which is an exciting job of research, and for that reason an important library item (upper grade elementary and junior high). The author has done an important task in giving fresh, significant material and interesting details on the fish-curing industry on the coast of Maine, back in 1646 when Cornishmen settled there. The story centers around Chris Tobey who escaped from a Puritan- owned English vessel to join his father, and ran head on into the troubles that plagued the Cornishmen, Indians, Royalists, Puritans, their own lawless settlers, and the long arm of English control.

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