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Books with title Pirates Off the Mark

  • The Pirates

    Douglas Botting, the editors of Time-Life Books, of Time-Life Books

    Paperback (Time Life UK, Jan. 1, 1920)
    LARGE HARDCOVER BOOK
  • Pirates Off the Wall

    T. W. Kirchner

    Paperback (CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform, Nov. 2, 2013)
    For two years, twelve-year-old Tommy Klopt, his dad, Hoody, and his two brothers, Connor and Dillon, sailed the seas as Robin Hood-type pirates. After meeting, and almost getting killed, by a pirate from the 1600s turned evil ghost, François l’Olonnais, the family decides to head back to land and start over. Life on land turns out badly for the family, and they set sail once again. It isn’t long before l’Olonnais returns and brings a fellow ghost pirate, Captain Jacques Mignard with him. Mignard needs a mortal’s help to retrieve his girlfriend, Cosette, and he heard Tommy can get the job done. Besides a time crunch, the biggest obstacle is a spiteful and tricky sea witch, Volange.
    Q
  • The Pirates

    Douglas Botting

    Hardcover (Time Life, Inc., March 15, 1656)
    None
  • Pirates on the Map

    Alix Wood

    Library Binding (PowerKids Press, Aug. 1, 2014)
    This valuable resource will teach readers everything they need to know to read a map. Theyll get lost in this book as they read fun facts about real-life pirate shipwrecks and buried treasure. They will also learn about scale, longitude and latitude, relevant vocabulary, and how to read a legend. Call-outs throughout the text will challenge them to think fast and test their newly acquired skills.
    S
  • The Pirates of Marathon

    Marc Antonio Jefferies

    Paperback (Big Smile Inc, Aug. 1, 2006)
    None
    T
  • The Pirates

    Douglas Botting

    Hardcover (Little Brown & Co, May 1, 1978)
    Discusses and documents the infamous activities of pirates around the world from the seventeenth to the nineteenth century
  • The Pirates

    Morgan Robertson

    (Wildside Press, May 5, 2008)
    The little destroyer rounded to alongside, and slowed down to a little more than the speed of the larger ship, which permitted her to creep along the huge, black side, inch by inch, until the bridges were nearly abreast. Then a white-whiskered man on the high bridge hailed: "Steamer ahoy! What do you want?" "Want all that bullion stowed in your strong room," answered Forsythe through a megaphone. "Load your gold into one of your own boats, the provisions in another. Lower them down and let the falls unreeve, so that they will go adrift. We will pick them up."
  • The Pirates

    Morgan Robertson

    (Wilder Publications, Aug. 5, 2015)
    She was the largest, fastest, and latest thing in seagoing destroyers, and though the specifications called for but thirty-six knots' speed, she had made thirty-eight on her trial trip, and later, under careful nursing by her engineers, she had increased this to forty knots an hour-five knots faster than any craft afloat-and, with a clean bottom, this speed could be depended upon at any time it was needed. She carried four twenty-one-inch torpedo tubes and a battery of six twelve-pounder, rapid-fire guns; also, she carried two large searchlights and a wireless equipment of seventy miles reach, the aërials of which stretched from the truck of her short signal mast aft to a short pole at the taffrail. Her crew was not on board, however. Newly scraped and painted in the dry dock, she had been hauled out, stored, and fueled by a navy-yard gang, and now lay at the dock, ready for sea-ready for her draft of men in the morning, and with no one on board for the night but the executive officer, who, with something on his mind, had elected to remain, while the captain and other commissioned officers went ashore for the night.
  • the pirates

    douglas botting

    Leather Bound (time life, March 15, 1978)
    None
  • The Pirates

    Morgan Robertson

    (Wilder Publications, April 3, 2018)
    She was the largest, fastest, and latest thing in seagoing destroyers, and though the specifications called for but thirty-six knots' speed, she had made thirty-eight on her trial trip, and later, under careful nursing by her engineers, she had increased this to forty knots an hour-five knots faster than any craft afloat-and, with a clean bottom, this speed could be depended upon at any time it was needed.
  • The Pirates

    Douglas. Botting

    Hardcover (Time-Life, March 15, 1979)
    None