Browse all books

Books in An Avon Camelot book series

  • Lisa and Lottie

    Erich Kastner, Victoria De Larrea

    Paperback (Avon Books, July 1, 1990)
    Two young girls meet at a summer camp in southern Germany and discover they are identical twins
    P
  • Racing the Sun

    Paul Pitts

    Paperback (HarperCollins, Aug. 1, 1988)
    Being an American in ian wasn't something twelve-year-old Brandon Rogers liked to advertise. His father had left his Indian heritage behind when he went to college and Brandon had grown up in suburbia-just a regular kid. Who neededembarrassing mumbo-jumbo to make you look different? But then Brandon's Navajo grandfather moved off the reservation and into the lower bunk in Brandon's room!It wasn't easy having a roommate who chanted himself to sleep and got you out of bed before sunrise to race the sun. But now Brandon's learning lessons he'll never forget. Like how to take on the old ways without giving up the new. And how to grow up proud and strong ... with a heritage as real as an old man's love.
    J
  • The California Kid Fights Back

    Deborah Scott

    Paperback (Camelot, Sept. 1, 1998)
    Embarking on another adventure through time, Flattop Kincaid is transported back to the Middle Ages, where his friend William is knighted and must serve his cruel brother James, and Flattop is thrown into a dungeon when he tries to defend William
    U
  • A Hippopotamus Ate the Teacher

    Mike Thaler, Jared D. Lee

    Paperback (HarperCollins, Sept. 1, 1981)
    One day, Ms. Jones took her class to visit the monkeys, the tigers, and the hippopotamus at the zoo. But when she leaned too close to the railing to feed a hippo a peanuts, the hippo ate Ms. Jones instead. Who will teach class now? Why the hippo, of course!When a hippopotamus eats the teacher instead of a peanut, the children wonder who will teach their class now?
    J
  • Devil's Bridge

    Cynthia DeFelice

    Paperback (Avon Books, April 1, 1994)
    For Ben, there's more involved in the annual Striped Bass Derby than catching the biggest fish. He's proud of the fact that no one has ever beaten his father's record which was won before Ben was born. But now Ben overhears two men plotting to win the prize money by cheating! Ben has to stop them, at all costs, but bringing the men to justice turns out to be a chase that almost costs him his life.
    R
  • Harry the Poisonous Centipede

    Lynne Reid Banks, Tony Ross

    Paperback (HarperCollins, Nov. 1, 1998)
    "It's a Hoo-Min! crackled George.""Walking on its hairy biter feet!"But now it was Harry who felt brave."Come on! Lets's peep at it."Harry is a poisonous centipede but he's not very brave.Still, he is the star of this seriously squirmy story. Harry likes to eat things that wriggle and crackle, and things that are juicy and munchy! But there are some things that a centipede must never try to eat -- dangerous things like flying swoopers, belly wrigglers, mid the most dangerous of all ... Hoo-Mins!Harry's mother makes him promise never to go up the Up-Pipe to the world of Hoo-Mins, but Harry's best friend, George, has other ideas! And as every young Hoo-Min knows, when your best friend wants to do something that sounds exciting, it's very hard to say no. So George and Harry poke their feelers out and smell the air....and that's when their adventures begin.Lynne Reid Banks's storytelling sparkles in this tale of her new centipede hero and his creepy-crawly world. Fizzing with fun, it will be a delightfully squirmy experience for all young readers.
    R
  • Going for the Gold: Shannon Miller

    Septima Green

    Paperback (Avon Books, May 1, 1996)
    Examines the life of the highly decorated gymnast
    Z
  • Painting the Black

    Carl Deuker

    Mass Market Paperback (HarperTeen, March 1, 1999)
    When a hard ball is coming at you fast, and when it's dancing, too, every single nerve in your body is alert and ready. Your eyes are wide open, and the adrenaline is pumping. It's not a feeling you want to give up, any more than you want to get off a roller coaster. In his senior year of high school, late-bloomer Ryan Ward has just begun to feel the magic of baseball: the magic of catching a wicked slider, of throwing a runner out, of training hard and pushing limits. But when one of his teammates clearly pushes the limits too far, Ryan is face with a heartbreaking dilemma: he must choose between his love for the game and his integrity.
  • Mystery in the Ravine

    Carol J. Farley, Joseph Escourido

    Paperback (Avon Books, Oct. 1, 1976)
    Larry and Kipper try to unravel a mysstery involving a disappearing body and a strange man claiming to be digging for Indian artifacts
    R
  • No Pretty Pictures: A Child of War

    Anita Lobel

    Paperback (GreenWilBk, Feb. 2, 2000)
    The beloved Caldecott Honor artist now recounts a tale of vastly different kind -- her own achingly potent memoir of a childhood of flight, imprisonment, and uncommon bravery in Nazi-occupied Poland. Anita Lobel was barely five when the war began and sixteen by the time she came to America from Sweden, where she had been sent to recover at the end of the war. This haunting book, illustrated with the author's archival photographs, is the remarkable account of her life during those years. Poised, forthright, and always ready to embrace life, Anita Lobel is the main character in the most personal story she will ever tell.Anita Lobel was barely five years old when World War II began and the Nazis burst into her home in Krakow, Poland, changing her life forever. She spent the days of her childhood in hiding with her brother--who was disguised as a girl--and their Catholic nanny in the countryside, the ghetto, and finally in a convent where the Nazis caught up with her. She was imprisoned in a succession of concentration camps until the end of the war. Sent by the Red Cross to recuperate in Sweden, she slowly blossomed as she discovered books and language and art. Since coming to the United States as a teenager, Anita Lobel has spent her life making pictures. She has never gone back. She has never looked back. Until now. 00-01 Tayshas High School Reading List Anita Lobel was barely five years old when World War II began and the Nazis burst into her home in Krakow, Poland, changing her life forever. She spent the days of her childhood in hiding with her brother--who was disguised as a girl--and their Catholic nanny in the countryside, the ghetto, and finally in a convent where the Nazis caught up with her. She was imprisoned in a succession of concentration camps until the end of the war. Sent by the Red Cross to recuperate in Sweden, she slowly blossomed as she discovered books and language and art. Since coming to the United States as a teenager, Anita Lobel has spent her life making pictures. She has never gone back. She has never looked back. Until now.
    Z
  • Maria, a Christmas Story

    Theodore Taylor

    Paperback (Camelot, Oct. 1, 1993)
    Maria enters her family in the big float competition that is part of the annual village Christmas celebration, an event usually participated in only by wealthy ranchers and never by poor Mexican-American families like Maria's. Reprint.
    R
  • The Case of the Vanishing Villain

    Carol J. Farley

    Paperback (Avon Books, Jan. 1, 1990)
    Thirteen-year old Flee Jay recounts the adventures of herself and her beautiful, brilliant younger sister, Clarice, when they become trapped on a car ferry in the middle of Lake Michigan with an escaped convict
    R