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Books with author Jacqueline Stem

  • Love and Loss

    Jacqueline Yap

    eBook (, Nov. 8, 2019)
    Love can be confusing, challenging and selfish. Daisy learns that love is not always a fairy tale, even if you receive your happily ever after.
  • Playing It Cool

    Jacqueline Roy

    Hardcover (Viking Children's Books, May 29, 1997)
    None
  • Let Me See What Your Tummy Says

    Jacqueline James

    eBook (Covenant Books, Inc., April 29, 2019)
    This is a story about a young boy who never wanted to eat his entire meal. His big mama created a fun and exciting game for him to finish his meals.
  • Bone Island: A Hollow Tree Mystery

    Jacqueline Stem

    Paperback (CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform, Sept. 26, 2018)
    Molly and Michael Russell, twins who, at a very young age, lost their parents in a car accident that wasn’t an accident, are being raised by Gunther and Willa, the body guard and secretary to their father. They’ve always thought their frequent moves from one place to another and the insistence of their caretakers that they wear some form of disguise when they are out in public was only a fun game Now that they are thirteen, it’s not a game anymore and when Molly is twice attacked by a stranger, they demand to know why and who is threatening them.
  • Cellar in the Woods by Jacqueline C. Stem

    Jacqueline C. Stem

    Hardcover (Eakin Press, March 15, 1631)
    None
  • Slaves of Men and Gods: Obroni Tales - Book One

    Jacqueline Smith

    (Independent Publishing Network, April 15, 2020)
    A gripping tale of intrigue and ancient traditions in the 21st century. Tribes, Shrine Priests, Ancient Traditions and the oldest Profession in the world.Fifteen year old Krisi Bodan is brought to Ghana from Scotland by her doctor father after her parents separate. While trying to cope with missing her mum and failing to forgive her dad; a new friend local head trader Gifty, needs her help. Then Krisi gets dangerously mired in much more than old Ghanaian practices.A new country, a new culture and on discovering the scary activities of some of her new friends...new enemies of the criminal and not so criminal kind.READER REVIEWS“There was intrigue from the start and I was kept guessing...with an interesting twist and reprise of danger towards the end.” CAROL Mc KAY author of ‘Incunabulum’“Smith’s writing is smooth, flawless...captivating…caught my attention in the first few lines and ends brilliantly… I really liked it.” Luigi ColuggiLouise Ainsworth “A gripping story with beautiful interweaving of Ghanaian culture and homeopathy anecdotes”GRACE RHOOMES “Smith carefully weaves similar issues across continents.’’