Perfect for fans of WISH and BECAUSE OF WINN-DIXIE comes award-winning author Sarah Guillory's latest middle grade tale of found family and the unshakable bond between a girl and her beloved dog.
Sisterhood can be a love-hate relationship, especially when you deal with the competitive spirit of pre-teenskids who just happen to possess superpowers.
When Janice and Tommy Brooks are invited to visit their Aunt Annabelle and her son Hubert at their new house in Maine near the Canadian border, they expect to have a wonderful summer.
Professor Bullfinch has created a radio telescope ("e;dish"e;) for the government which will try to determine if extraterrestrials are trying to contact Earth.
Professor Bullfinch and Doctor Grimes take Danny and his friends to the beginning of the Nile River in Africa to investigate local legends of a swamp monster.
When two of four rare trumpeter swans disappear from their nesting place, four children living on the wildlife refuge set out to discover what happened to them.
Biff Norris and Chip Edwards, high school friends, find themselves involved in thrilling mysteries and adventures in this exciting series of stories written for boys and girls up to sixteen years of age.
Twins Will and Lettie Dennis and their cousin Jonas Wingate are unwilling visitors to the old Maine homestead of their older cousin, Mary Pete Tibbets.
Here are 4 classic mysteries for younger readers:Sea View Secret, by Elizabeth KinseyWhen the Bowmans moved to the suburbs, Peter and Jane discovered there weren't any kids their own age in the neighborhood.
The first book in the series, The Five Clues, is a real-time murder-mystery thriller and family drama, combining an exciting race against time with a heart-rending story about a teenager learning to live with the loss of a beloved parent.
In a world inhabited by two distinct humanoid species, the majors and the outers, teenage 'detectives' Troy Goodhart (major) and Lexi Four (outer) are challenged by a series of mysterious and gruesome crimes.
Seventeen-year-old Matt Foley has a typical set of problems: feeling alienated from his perpetually perky family, struggling to focus on classes when sports seem far more interesting, chafing at the slow pace of life in his small Virginia town.