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Books with title Howl at the Moon

  • Howl at the Moon

    L.A. Starkey

    eBook (BrixBaxter Publishing, Feb. 23, 2015)
    Eighth graders, Ben, Jake and Leah need cash, and mowing lawns in the winter just isn’t cutting it. Their need for cash births the Liarus (Liars R Us) Detective Agency! Their first client is Old Lady Smitz, who is said to have murdered her three sons and husband. She’s missing a family heirloom, but it’s not just any old trinket, it’s the crest of Lykoi. There are only two rules: No girls are allowed and never seal a deal with the witch doctor. Disregarding danger, these three discover that money is usually more trouble than it’s worth!
  • Howl At The Moon

    Jessica Young, James Burks

    Library Binding (Turtleback Books, May 30, 2017)
    FOR USE IN SCHOOLS AND LIBRARIES ONLY. Haggis and Tank's imaginations take them across the globe -- to Scotland! They fly an airplane, visit a castle, play bagpipes, and even get chased by a... werewolf?! This series is full of clever wordplay and homophones that make Haggis and Tank's adventures even more fun! And James Burks' engaging, full-color artwork appears on every page!
    G
  • The Mouse Who Howled At the Moon

    Miss Sarah Hindmarsh, Ms Laura Dewsnap

    Paperback (CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform, Oct. 15, 2014)
    Harvey has always been the odd mouse out at the orphanage where he lives. Join him and his friends and find out just why it is that he has to howl at the full moon, and how this will help when a gang of mean owls moves in to the wood next door. Can Harvey save the orphanage from the owls? And will the other mice at the orphanage accept him as one of them when they hear all about his secret talent? Beautifully illustrated by Laura Dewsnap, The Mouse Who Howled at the Moon, is suitable for very young children as a bedtime story or for confident readers 5 years plus and most children 7 years plus to read alone. The Mouse Who Howled at the Moon is the first in the Animal Adventures series. Find fun fact sheets about the real species in the stories at the end of each book for an educational twist or simply enjoy the fun stories with subtle positive messages about family, friendship and helping each other.
    U
  • The Moon at Noon

    Jule Owen

    language (Mean Time Books, Dec. 22, 2015)
    A door in time. A visitor from the future. A girl determined to save the boy she loves.The third book in the mind-twisting dystopian time travel series, 'The House Next Door'Mathew Erlang travels north through an England overrun by violence and sickness. Accompanied by a new friend, he finally makes it to his grandmother’s house, but all is not as it seems in this childhood place of safety. Meanwhile, Clara makes an uncanny pact with Mathew’s peculiar neighbour and finally learns the truth about Mr. Lestrange.˃˃˃ Author Q&AQ: What made you want to write YA time travel fiction?I love books like the Hunger Games and Divergent. I also love books like Patrick Ness’s Chaos Walking and Chuck Wendig’s Heartland Trilogy. They are all exciting, deeply engaging dystopian action adventure series. They all make you stop and think. So I wanted to write something similar. But I’ve been reading about futurology and climate change for years and they have seeped into my subconscious. I liked the idea of exploring possible futures based on the non-fiction I’d be reading. To do that I needed Mathew Erlang, my main character, to be able to jump forward into the future to see how things turn out. Q: Why specifically write teen dystopia? Why not write for adults?I’m not sure I am specifically writing just for teens. I read a lot of young adult fiction and I’m certainly not a teen! But when I built the world and the much bigger story that Mathew’s tale exists in, he happened to turn out to be a teenaged boy at the beginning of his series. Q: You describe your books at cli-fi. What does that mean?Cli-fi means climate change fiction. It’s a spin on sci-fi, of course, but it’s a type of dystopian science fiction or speculative fiction that specifically deals with the impact of climate change on the people of the future.Q: Why did you want to write about climate change?It’s the big issue of our times and the biggest challenge we’ve faced as a civilisation. There’s a huge scientific consensus about the fact that climate change is man made and that it is likely to massively disrupt our lives in the future, but lots of people don’t believe in it. I read an article a while ago in The New Scientist (which is my favourite magazine) saying that the climate change lobby needs more artists and writers to go and spread the message. Frighteningly, young people, who are likely to suffer the most in the future, are particularly not engaging with the issue.Q: Is this it for Mathew? Are there no more stories?This is the last book in the 'House Next Door' trilogy, but I am already working on the first book in a new series. It tells the story of the Kind and the Lamplighter, characters that appeared at the end of 'The Boy Who Fell from the Sky'. Plus, I don't think I'm quite done with Mathew yet. We'll have to see. Scroll up and grab a copy today.
  • The Moon at Noon

    Jule Owen

    Paperback (Mean Time Books, Dec. 21, 2015)
    A door in time. A visitor from the future. A girl determined to save the boy she loves. The third book in the mind-twisting dystopian time travel series, 'The House Next Door' Mathew Erlang travels north through an England overrun by violence and sickness. Accompanied by a new friend, he finally makes it to his grandmother’s house, but all is not as it seems in this childhood place of safety. Meanwhile, Clara makes an uncanny pact with Mathew’s peculiar neighbour and finally learns the truth about Mr. Lestrange.
  • Howl at the Moon

    Zoey Wasco

    Paperback (CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform, April 13, 2017)
    If you're an Anime lover or a fiction-book-nerd, you should join Phe, a hybrid girl with wolf ears and tail. Join her on finding her powers.
  • Howl at the Moon

    L.A. Starkey

    Paperback (Patchwork Press, Feb. 19, 2015)
    Eighth graders, Ben, Jake and Leah need cash, and mowing lawns in the winter just isn’t cutting it. Their need for cash births the Liarus (Liars R Us) Detective Agency! Their first client is Old Lady Smitz, who is said to have murdered her three sons and husband. She’s missing a family heirloom, but it’s not just any old trinket, it’s the crest of Lykoi. There are only two rules: No girls are allowed and never seal a deal with the witch doctor. Disregarding danger, these three discover that money is usually more trouble than it’s worth!
  • Howling at the Moon

    Neil Waring

    eBook (Old Trails Publishing, Dec. 19, 2018)
    Meeting a ghost named Melvin, being scared nearly witless by a zombie, and then discovering vampires next door should have been enough for the boys of the Mike, Moose, and Me series. Howling at the Moon, book four in the series might be the craziest and scariest adventure yet.The three sixth graders are on their first campout and enjoying it until a werewolf appears, then things get wild.Will they survive? Will the three need to kill the werewolf or will they run away. Enjoy this fast-moving adventure set in early summer,1958. This book is appropriate for readers of all ages but was written for third and fourth graders, along with anyone who grew up in the 1950s and 1960s, especially grandparents. Reading Level 5.6 - Flesch Reading Ease 83.4
  • Rudy Howls at the Moon

    Grace Diaz

    language (Grace Diaz LLC, July 21, 2019)
    Rudy wants more than anything to be “normal” and fit in. But being a night-rooster doesn’t help! However, Rudy discovers that his uniqueness is tied to his purpose. He can be himself and still be accepted and loved for who he truly is.
  • Lana Lynn Howls at the Moon

    Rebecca Van Slyke, Anca Sandu

    Hardcover (Peachtree Publishing Company, Sept. 1, 2019)
    An adventurous sheep tries to take a walk on the wild side and encounters more than she expected.Lana Lynn is an intrepid sheep. The other members of her flock are content to nibble grass in the pasture, sip water from the pond, and nap in the meadow. But not Lana Lynn. She wants… adventure! So one night, when the moon is high and the other sheep are asleep, she finds a disguise and dashes into the wild woods to see what life is like as a wolf. It’s fun to run through the wild woods, stay up very late, and howl at the Moon―but is life with the wolf pack everything it seems?Rebecca Van Slyke’s charming depiction of experiencing new things is accented by Anca Sandu’s humorous illustrations.
    L
  • Howling at the Moon

    Neil A. Waring

    Paperback (Independently published, Dec. 20, 2018)
    Meeting a ghost named Melvin, being scared nearly witless by a zombie, and then discovering vampires next door should have been enough for the boys of the Mike, Moose, and Me series. Howling at the Moon, book four in the series might be the craziest and scariest adventure yet.The three sixth graders are on their first campout and enjoying it until a werewolf appears, then things get wild.Will they survive? Will the three need to kill the werewolf or will they run away. Enjoy this fast-moving adventure set in early summer,1958. This book is appropriate for readers of all ages but was written for third and fourth graders, along with anyone who grew up in the 1950s and 1960s, especially grandparents. Reading Level 5.6 - Flesch Reading Ease 83.4
  • Rudy Howls at the Moon

    Grace Diaz

    Paperback (Grace Diaz, LLC, July 5, 2019)
    Rudy wants more than anything to be “normal” and fit in. But being a night-rooster doesn’t help! However, Rudy discovers that his uniqueness is tied to his purpose. He can be himself and still be accepted and loved for who he truly is.
    Z+