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Books with title Race to Kitty Hawk

  • Kitty Hawk

    Roland Smith

    eBook (Sleeping Bear Press, May 20, 2013)
    The president's daughter has been kidnapped by the elusive and lethal Ghost Cell. Quest (Q) and Angela are in hot pursuit with vicious winds and blinding rain thwarting them at every turn. It's a desperate high stakes chase. But who is chasing whom? Are Q and Angela the hunters or the hunted?
    X
  • Kitty Hawk

    Roland Smith

    Paperback (Sleeping Bear Press, Sept. 1, 2012)
    The president's daughter has been kidnapped by the elusive and lethal Ghost Cell. Quest (Q) and Angela are in hot pursuit with vicious winds and blinding rain thwarting them at every turn. It's a desperate high stakes chase. But who is chasing whom? Are Q and Angela the hunters or the hunted?
    U
  • Kitty Hawk

    Roland Smith

    Hardcover (Sleeping Bear Press, Sept. 1, 2012)
    The president's daughter has been kidnapped by the elusive and lethal Ghost Cell. Quest (Q) and Angela are in hot pursuit with vicious winds and blinding rain thwarting them at every turn. It's a desperate high stakes chase. But who is chasing whom? Are Q and Angela the hunters or the hunted?
    U
  • Race to Kitty Hawk

    Annelle Rigsby, Edwina Raffa

    Library Binding (Silver Moon Pr, June 1, 2003)
    After being adopted by a woman in Dayton, Ohio, in 1903, orphaned twelve-year-old Tess Raney uncovers a plot to foil the Wright brothers' quest to be the first in flight, and takes great risks to make sure the plot fails.
    V
  • The road to Kitty Hawk

    Valerie Moolman, Editors of Time-Life Books

    Hardcover (Time Life, March 15, 1980)
    Chronicles the stories of those who strove to solve the secrets of flight, covering the would-be birdmen of the Middle Ages, the glider design of Cayley, the failed attempts of Lilienthal, Chanute, and Langley, and the Wright brothers' success
  • Road to Kitty Hawk

    Valerie Moolman

    Hardcover (Time Life Education, May 1, 1980)
    Chronicles the stories of those who strove to solve the secrets of flight, covering the would-be birdmen of the Middle Ages, the glider design of Cayley, the failed attempts of Lilienthal, Chanute, and Langley, and the Wright brothers' success
  • The Road to Kitty Hawk

    Valerie Moolman

    Hardcover (Time Life, March 15, 1843)
    Book
  • Road to Kitty Hawk

    Valerie (And The Editors Of Time-Life Boo Moolman

    Library Binding (Time Life, May 15, 1980)
    Over-sized leatherette book published by Time Life..ShelveK-13
  • Kitty Hawk

    Roland Smith

    Hardcover (Sleeping Bear Press, Jan. 1, 1826)
    None
  • Kitty Hawk

    Dave Sargent, Jane Lenoir

    Paperback (Ozark Pubns, Feb. 1, 2000)
    Kitty Hawk teaches Pansy Packrat that stealing is wrong. Includes factual information on hawks.
  • The road to Kitty Hawk

    Valerie Moolman

    Hardcover (Time-Life Books, March 15, 1981)
    This is one of a series of books, by Time Life, which explores the history of aviation from its earliest beginnings up to the jet age. This particular volume covers the span of history and myth from around 11 BC up to and through the Wright brothers successful achievement of powered flight in the early 1900s. In the process, it discusses such diverse flying objects, and hoped-for flying objects, as kites; balloons; manned and unmanned gliders; tower jumpers paraphernalia; parachutes; and finally powered craft, both successful and unsuccessful. In reading the book, I was astonished to see how many misguided men seemingly had more guts than brains and attempted flight with no preparation and little or no understanding of what they were about to do. I was also surprised to find that, with so many attempts over such a long period of time, so little was learned by those who followed concerning the elements and requirements of flight, either powered or otherwise. Take, for example, the efforts of Robert Cocking who, in 1837, fashioned a parachute of his own design. He and his chute were hoisted aloft beneath a hot air balloon and released at about 5,000 feet. The parachute then collapsed carrying Cocking to his death. Academically speaking, it seems that it would have been much more prudent to have tested the parachute before the actual attempt.
  • The Road to Kitty Hawk

    Valerie Moolman

    Hardcover (Time Life, March 15, 1720)
    None