Teen Power Inc. - Books

Books

  • #1 - The Ghost of Raven Hill - Narrated by Liz
  • #2 - The Sorcerer's Apprentice - Narrated by Tom (co-author John St Clair)
  • #3 - The Disappearing TV Star - Narrated by Richelle (co-author Mary Forrest)
  • #4 - Cry of the Cat - Narrated by Elmo (co-author Mary Forrest)
  • #5 - Beware the Gingerbread House - Narrated by Sunny
  • #6 - Green for Danger - Narrated by Nick (co-author John St Clair)
  • #7 - Breaking Point - Narrated by Liz
  • #8 - The Secret of Banyan Bay - Narrated by Tom
  • #9 - The Bad Dog Mystery - Narrated by Richelle (co-author Mary Forrest)
  • #10 - Poison Pen - Narrated by Elmo (co-author Mary Forrest)
  • #11 - The Missing Millionaire - Narrated by Sunny
  • #12 - Crime in the Picture - Narrated by Nick (co-author John St Clair)
  • #13 - Nowhere to Run - Narrated by Liz
  • #14 - Dangerous Game - Narrated by Tom (co-author Robert Sexton)
  • #15 - Haunted House - Narrated by Sunny
  • #16 - The Case of Crazy Claude - Narrated by Nick (co-author Robert Sexton)
  • #17 - Fear in Fashion - Narrated by Richelle (co-author Mary Forrest)
  • #18 - Danger in Rhyme - Narrated by Elmo (co-author Mary Forrest)
  • #19 - Cry Wolf - Narrated by Liz
  • #20 - Photo Finish - Narrated by Tom (co-author Robert Sexton)
  • #21 - Stage Fright - Narrated by Richelle (co-author Sam Kester)
  • #22 - Saint Elmo's Fire - Narrated by Elmo (co-author Robert Sexton)
  • #23 - Bad Apples - Narrated by Sunny
  • #24 - The War of the Work Demons - Narrated by Nick (co-author Robert Sexton)
  • #25 - Dirty Tricks - Narrated by Richelle (co-author Kate Rowe)
  • #26 - Hot Pursuit - Narrated by Elmo (co-author Kate Rowe)
  • #27 - Hit or Miss - Narrated by Liz (co-author Kate Rowe)
  • #28 - Deep Freeze - Narrated by Tom (co-author Kate Rowe)
  • #29 - The Secret Enemy - Narrated by Sunny
  • #30 - Dead End - Narrated by Nick

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Famous quotes containing the word books:

    My only books Were woman’s looks And folly’s all they taught me.
    Thomas Moore (1779–1852)

    What I am now warning the People of is, That the News-Papers of this Island are as pernicious to weak Heads in England as ever Books of Chivalry to Spain; and therefore shall do all that in me lies, with the utmost Care and Vigilance imaginable, to prevent these growing Evils.
    Richard Steele (1672–1729)

    Like dreaming, reading performs the prodigious task of carrying us off to other worlds. But reading is not dreaming because books, unlike dreams, are subject to our will: they envelop us in alternative realities only because we give them explicit permission to do so. Books are the dreams we would most like to have, and, like dreams, they have the power to change consciousness, turning sadness to laughter and anxious introspection to the relaxed contemplation of some other time and place.
    Victor Null, South African educator, psychologist. Lost in a Book: The Psychology of Reading for Pleasure, introduction, Yale University Press (1988)