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Books with title Indigo Incite: The Indigo Trilogy: Book One

  • Indigo Incite: The Indigo Trilogy: Book One

    Jacinda Buchmann, Mickey Reed

    language (Jacinda Buchmann, Jan. 16, 2014)
    There are no secrets.Sixteen-year-old Tyler believed that his extra-sensory powers were a secret, but when his twin brother Toby is kidnapped by a covert government agency, he realizes that he has no secrets and he has nowhere to hide.He’s not alone.Now, to save himself and rescue his brother, Tyler must call upon the help of four strangers. Unknown to each other, Eddie, Liliana, Grace, and Sarah share a common bond. They are Indigo Children. With extra-sensory powers of their own they must unite with Tyler to maintain their freedom.Unexpected romanceThey’re on the run. They’re on a mission. Romance is a distraction that Tyler can’t afford. But sometimes the heart has a mind of its own.Time is running out.Will they find Toby before the agency finds them first? Find out in Indigo Incite, Book One of the Indigo Trilogy.
  • Indigo Instinct: The Indigo Trilogy: Book Two

    Jacinda Buchmann, Mickey Reed

    language (, May 17, 2014)
    They thought they were safe.Identical twins, Tyler and Toby, escaped the clutches of a covert government agency determined to exploit their extrasensory powers. Before they regained their freedom, they acquired proof of the agency's existence, proof that was guaranteed to secure immunity not only for themselves but for their friends as well.They took more than they bargained for.When the brothers learn that they have unfinished business with the agency, they find themselves reunited with Indigo Children, Liliana, Grace, Eddie, and Rebecka and once again on the run.They must rely on their instincts.While Grace and Eddie discover love isn't always easy, Sarah's life is thrown into turmoil, and her guilty conscience leads to fear and distrust of her own heart.Intuition doesn't lie.There are new players in the game and it isn't easy to know who to trust.Sometimes the right path isn't always the easiest.Is there a way to give the agency what they want and still retain their freedom? Find out in Indigo Instinct, Book Two of The Indigo Trilogy.
  • Indigo Incite: The Indigo Trilogy: Book One

    Jacinda Buchmann, Judy Bullard

    (CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform, Aug. 22, 2013)
    There are no secrets Sixteen-year-old Tyler believed that his extra-sensory powers were a secret, but when his twin brother, Toby, is kidnapped by a covert government agency he realizes that he has no secrets, and he has nowhere to hide. He’s not alone Now, to save himself and rescue his brother, Tyler must call upon the help of four strangers. Unknown to each other, Eddie, Liliana, Grace, and Sarah share a common bond. They are Indigo Children. With extra-sensory powers of their own, they must unite with Tyler to maintain their freedom. Unexpected romance They’re on the run. They’re on a mission. Romance is a distraction that Tyler can’t afford. But sometimes the heart has a mind of its own. Time is running out Will they find Toby before the agency finds them first? Find out in Indigo Incite, Book One of the Indigo Trilogy.
  • Jack: Book One in the Trilogy

    Gary Dorion

    language (, Aug. 25, 2015)
    "This is a rollicking read!" - Katie Lewington, author and Amazon reviewer. Readers may find themselves rooting for Jack and best friend, Jeremy, as they revolt against their racist teacher while engaging in questionable behavior. It is war. Jack is a difficult young man in his mid-teens already facing adulthood. His dreams are not yet tempered by experience. He is driven to find adventure and causes he can rally around while pressuring reluctant friends to join him. Schoolmaster Jerome Whittemore presents Jack with the perfect challenge and chance to add excitement to his life, and win popularity with the students. He cooks up a rebellion, inventing scheme after scheme to exact revenge on the schoolmaster. The 'master' had beaten him one day with a hickory branch in front of the class. Jack refused to give him the satisfaction of making him cry. He remained silent. Whittemore repeatedly whacked him harde,r but Jack would not to cry out. All he got was silence. The students began to join 'the rebel.' Jack didn't forget the beating. Whittemore not only is abusive but tries his hardest to impart to his students his own racist, secessionist ideas. He glorifies the southern white plantation slavery system. His students won't have it. All conspire to defeat him - except two who side with him against the 'rebels.' What the students didn't know was that Master Whittemore had been an unofficial minister on slave ships prior to being hired as a teacher. His 'sermons' supported the crew in their nasty, brutalizing work. He told the sailors their efforts were crucial in building the 'great civilization' of the American south. Book One is set in Charleston, South Carolina,1860, just months before the civil war. Although the school is fictional, the city had rudiments of a public-school system as far back as the late 18th Century. Schoolmaster Whittemore is obsessed with beating Jack at his own game. He hates Jack. Jack hates him back. He is so intent on defeating Jack that he tries to bribe his students with good grades if they help catch Jack in a lie or in some act that will humiliate him again in his one-room school house. "Master" gets that evidence from his two 'pet" students - the Sliney twins - who, Jack maintained, were "snitches and liars." He concocts his idea of a lopsided trial after the twins told him that Jack got many of the other boys in the class to play tag and chase one another over the altar at altar boy practice while unsupervised the past Saturday. This trial is one of many humorous parts of the book. The school master names the church custodian as defense lawyer and money collector as judge. The schoolmaster gets a hollow victory as his students cheer Jack in the end, seeing Jack as the victor who grilled the Sliney twins. At home that night, Whittemore gets drunk. He knew Jack had stood on higher moral ground. He realizes the truth - he had been lying to himself for years, and lying to children. He sees the criticism his students tried to make. They rejected his support for the plantation slavery system and secession from the United States. "From the mouths of babes," he tells himself. At the end of Book 1, the schoolmaster quits teaching. He decides to return to the same slave ship on which he formerly preached the necessity of slavery. His plans are different this time. He intends to do the opposite. He wants to incite rebellion and mutiny. Jack and Jeremy witness a different side of Whittemore - one his students had hoped to see but didn't. Still itching for adventure and sad that Whittemore just quit - or gave up - Jack convinces Jeremy to sign up to the same ship the master joined. Both are ignorant of the fact that it is a slaver. In Jamaica (Book 2), they meet two young women - America and Mauricia. The four conspire to take the ship. They plan to set free the slave cargo to be boarded in Cuba. A dangerous game begins.
  • Arson: Book One in The Arson Trilogy

    Estevan Vega

    Paperback (StoneHouse Ink, Sept. 27, 2011)
    Arson Gable feels like a freak. He can create fire. He never asked for it. He never wanted it. But he can't shut it off. Before now, three things were true: he both loved and despised his grandmother; his life was going nowhere; and he was alone. But when a strange girl--who feels more normal behind a mask than inside her own skin--moves in next door, Arson hopes to find something he's never had: purpose. Using what he fears most about himself, Arson must face his consuming past and confront the nightmare that is his present as he walks the fine line between boy and monster. Dark, moody, and breathtakingly relevant, Arson, the chilling chronicle of an isolated boy with unimaginable ability, is sure to ignite the hearts and minds of a new generation.
  • Indigo Instinct: The Indigo Trilogy: Book Two

    Jacinda Buchmann, Mickey Reed, Judy Bullard

    (CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform, May 8, 2014)
    They thought they were safe. Identical twins, Tyler and Toby, escaped the clutches of a covert government agency determined to exploit their extrasensory powers. Before they regained their freedom, they acquired proof of the agency's existence, proof that was guaranteed to secure immunity not only for themselves but for their friends as well. They took more than they bargained for. When the brothers learn that they have unfinished business with the agency, they find themselves reunited with Indigo Children, Liliana, Grace, Eddie, and Rebecka and once again on the run. They must rely on their instincts. While Grace and Eddie discover that love isn't always easy, Sarah's life is thrown into turmoil, and her guilty conscience leads to fear and distrust of her own heart. Intuition doesn't lie. There are new players in the game and it isn't easy to know who to trust. Sometimes the right path isn't always the easiest. Is there a way to give the agency what they want and still retain their freedom? Find out in Indigo Instinct, Book Two of The Indigo Trilogy.