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Teen and Young Adult Books |
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By: Harry Collingwood (1851-1922) | |
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Cruise of the Esmeralda
After his father died, Captain Saint Leger and his family are left destitute. However, the Saint Legers have a family secret: an ancestor is said to have buried a vast fortune in gold and jewels somewhere in the Eastern Seas. The catch: all directions are encrypted. Nevertheless, Captain Saint Leger decides to take a chance and sails east. A journey full of adventure begins, including pirates, storms and mutiny... | |
A Middy in Command A Tale of the Slave Squadron | |
The First Mate The Story of a Strange Cruise | |
A Middy of the King A Romance of the Old British Navy | |
Under the Meteor Flag Log of a Midshipman during the French Revolutionary War | |
Under the Chilian Flag A Tale of War between Chili and Peru | |
The Voyage of the Aurora |
By: Lord Dunsany (1878-1957) | |
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Fifty-One Tales
Very brief, well-crafted stories, many having surprise endings, all steeped in the dye of myth and calling to every reader's neglected imagination. |
By: Edward Stratemeyer (1862-1930) | |
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The Rover Boys on the Ocean
The hearty, all-American Rover Boys sail by yacht to Africa in search of their kidnapped father. | |
The Mystery at Putnam Hall The School Chums' Strange Discovery | |
The Rover Boys on the Farm or Last Days at Putnam Hall | |
The Rover Boys on the River The Search for the Missing Houseboat | |
The Rover Boys on the Great Lakes Or, the secret of the island cave |
By: Arthur M. Winfield (1862-1930) | |
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Rover Boys in the Jungle
Third entry in the then-popular boys' adventure series has the Rover brothers (Tom, Dick, & Sam) heading to Africa to search for their long-missing father, after a few more adventures at their upstate New York boarding school, Putnam Hall. |
By: Arthur M. Winfield (1862-1930) | |
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Rover Boys Out West
Despite the title, the Rover Brothers spend several chapters -- over half the book -- back East, against arch-nemeses Josiah Crabtree and the Baxter family. Formulaic fun was dated even by the 1940's when Orson Welles satirized it on the radio. |