YOU CHOOSE . . . Wealth beyond your wildest dreams or deadly pirate's curse!You find an old map while holidaying in a secluded seaside town. It is said to have belonged to the fiercest pirate of them all - One-Eyed William, who was buried with his treasure. Could it be real, or is it someone's idea
The Treasure of Dead Man's Lane and Other Case Files
β Scribed by Cheshire, Simon
- Book ID
- 108926588
- Publisher
- Roaring Brook Press
- Year
- 2008
- Tongue
- en-US
- Weight
- 4 MB
- Series
- Saxby Smart- Private Detective 8
- Category
- Fiction
- ISBN-13
- 9781596434752
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
PUT ON YOUR DETECTIVE HAT . . . TAKE OUT YOUR MAGNIFYING GLASS. The Saxby
series lets readers solve the case!
Using wit, logic, and the help of his friends, young detective Saxby Smart is back to work, recovering a valuable comic book, searching for hidden treasure, and keeping intruders out of the neighborhood. Saxby records the facts for three new cases in his notebook, laying out all the clues readers need to solve the mysteries on their own.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
In this third volume of the Saxby Smart: Private Detective series, SaxbyΒ solves three more daunting cases: The Pirate's Blood, The Mystery of Mary Rogers, and The Lunchbox of Notre Dame. With the help of his Thinking Chair (located in his headquarters/parents' tool shed), his sharp mind, and his two
Computers have failed, electricity is extinct, and the race to discover new lands is underway! Brilliant explorer Alexander West has just died under mysterious circumstances, but not before smuggling half of a strange map to his intrepid childrenΒKit the brain, M.K. the tinkerer, and Zander the brav
The twenty-four tales in this book are of the most famous lost treasures in America, from a two-foot statue reportedly made entirely of silver (the "Madonna") and a cache of gold, silver, and jewelry that was rumored to also contain the first Bible in America to seventeen tons of gold--its value equ
Freda Pridgeon has the original coat worn by General Lee on the day he surrendered at Appomattox. Her greedy children want it, but she has found an ingenious way to protect it from them.