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Books with author Gary L. Blackwood

  • Legends or Lies

    Gary L Blackwood

    Library Binding (Cavendish Square Publishing, Sept. 1, 2005)
    "Describes several legends that have intrigued people for centuries: the lost civilization of Atlantis, the Amazons, King Arthur, St. Brendan, Pope Joan, and El Dorado"--Provided by publisher.
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  • THE SHAKESPEARE STEALER By Blackwood, Gary L.

    Gary L. Blackwood

    Paperback (Puffin Books, July 1, 2000)
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  • Around the World in 100 Days

    Gary Blackwood

    Hardcover (Dutton Books for Young Readers, Nov. 11, 2010)
    Picking up where Around the World in Eighty Days left off, Harry Fogg, the son of Phileas Fogg, has just made a wager of his own. Harry bets that he can drive a steam-powered motorcar all the way around the world in only 100 days. Racing off with three companions, Harry undertakes a grueling journey that will pit him against flash fires, marauders, and even sabotage from within. In the tradition of the Jules Verne classic, this is one historical adventure that will have you racing to the finish!
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  • Extraordinary Events and Oddball Occurrences

    Gary L Blackwood

    Library Binding (Cavendish Square Publishing, Jan. 1, 2000)
    UFOs. Spooky spectres. Psychic detectives. Are these and other events, occurrences, and people like them real or imagined? In Secrets of the Unexplained, author Gary Blackwood invites us to make up our own minds. This exciting and thorough series brings the world of the paranormal to the fingertips of young readers.
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  • Life in a Medieval Castle

    Gary L. Blackwood

    Library Binding (Lucent Books, Sept. 1, 1999)
    Describes the history, purpose, and construction of medieval castles and the life of their various inhabitants
  • The Year of the Hangman

    Gary Blackwood

    Paperback (Scholastic Inc., Jan. 1, 2002)
    LIBRARY BOUND - histroical fiction
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  • Gangsters

    Gary L Blackwood

    Hardcover (Cavendish Square Publishing, Sept. 1, 2001)
    Noted author Gary L. Blackwood grew up intrigued by crime fighters. In Bad Guys, the two-time Smithsonian Notable Book Award winner takes a look at the other side. A motley crew of villians, their chronicles are, indeed, fascinating. Yet, Blackwood goes far beyond storytelling. Placing the shenanigans of highwaymen, outlaws, swindlers, gangsters, and pirates against the backdrop of history, he considers them each in terms of the places and times in which the culprits operated. Were they evil cutthroats? Or, were they driven to their deeds out of desperation? In general, readers will find very few Robin Hoods. They will also discover that the reality of many of these men and women lies somewhere between utter scoundrel and social casualty.
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  • Wild Timothy

    Gary Blackwood

    Paperback (Puffin, Sept. 30, 2002)
    Thirteen-year-old Timothy, more interested in reading than in physical activity, reluctantly accompanies his enthusiastic father on a camping trip and, when he accidentally becomes lost in the woods, discovers that he is capable of surviving on his own. Reissue.
  • Shakespeare's Scribe

    Gary Blackwood

    Hardcover (Dutton Juvenile, Sept. 4, 2000)
    When the plague shuts down the Globe Theatre, Widge must find something new to keep him occupied and soon finds himself working alongside Shakespeare as he writes a new play for the Queen of England. By the author of The Shakespeare Stealer.
  • Long-Ago Lives

    Gary L. Blackwood

    Library Binding (Benchmark Books, Dec. 1, 1999)
    Examines reincarnation, discussing past lives, age regression through hypnosis, spontaneous memory, false memory, karma, and notable case studies.
  • The Shakespeare Stealer

    Gary L. Blackwood

    Paperback (Scholastic Paperbacks, June 30, 1998)
    High jinks and high adventure fill every page of this exciting, panoramic novel set in Shakespeare's time. Widge, our hero, is a young orphan indentured to a cold, unscrupulous master because the young boy has a special talent--the ability to write a secret shorthand. The master is bent on getting hold of the script of Hamlet at any cost, so it becomes Widge's task to transcribe it--or else. This picaresque tale follows Widge as he hightails his way into the very heart of the Globe Theatre and Shakespeare's company of players. As full of twists as a London alleyway, this entertaining novel is rich in period details, colorful characters, villainy, drama, and chuckles. Swordplay and wordplay share the stage with pure fun, all of which will keep readers rapt to the final scene.
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  • Shakespeare's Spy

    Gary Blackwood

    Hardcover (Dutton Books for Young Readers, Oct. 13, 2003)
    Intrigue, betrayal, and romance surround Widge as we find him back in London and at the center of things, as usual. Queen Elizabeth, Shakespeare's patron, has died, but the new king and his queen love drama-on stage and off. Shakespeare has begun a new play about political intrigue, but real intrigue is close at hand. Someone is stealing from the company, and Shakespeare's scripts must be guarded at all costs-including the one he has given up on and turned over to Widge to finish. Widge finds the glory of being a playwright appealing, especially when there's a pretty girl to impress. But spying is even more exciting! Readers swept up in the first two adventures about Widge and Shakespeare's players will be enthralled yet again by this third tale with its dramatic twists and turns and an ending worthy of the Bard himself.
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