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Books with title Strange Travelers

  • Strange Travelers

    Sigmund A Lavine

    Hardcover (Little, Brown & Company, March 15, 1960)
    None
  • Strange Travelers

    Sigmund A. Lavine

    Hardcover (Little, Brown & Co., March 15, 1960)
    None
  • Travelers

    Edward Cox Jr.

    language (, April 28, 2018)
    Fourteen years ago, historian Richard Lane stumbled upon William Penn's field journal and clues to Alden, another world hidden by Native Americans. Now, his daughter, thirteen-year-old Abby, is following the same clues to try and rescue her father from kidnappers that have returned him to Alden. Abby and her friends, Bryan and Courtney, embark on a journey to find and save Richard. In Alden, Abby finds more than a new world. She meets Lakota, a shapeshifter, who not only can change into any living thing he touches, but also reveals her true identity. Abby learns that her father had stolen her as a baby and is now being brought to justice by her previously unknown mother, the Queen of Alden. Abby is torn between helping the father she loves and accepting her life as a princess that her father took from her.
  • Travelers

    Edward Cox Jr.

    (Independently published, May 1, 2018)
    Fourteen years ago, historian Richard Lane stumbled upon William Penn's field journal and clues to Alden, another world hidden by Native Americans. Now, his daughter, thirteen-year-old Abby, is following the same clues to try and rescue her father from kidnappers that have returned him to Alden. Abby and her friends, Bryan and Courtney, embark on a journey to find and save Richard. In Alden, Abby finds more than a new world. She meets Lakota, a shapeshifter, who not only can change into any living thing he touches, but also reveals her true identity. Abby learns that her father had stolen her as a baby and is now being brought to justice by her previously unknown mother, the Queen of Alden. Abby is torn between helping the father she loves and accepting her life as a princess that her father took from her.
  • The Three Strange Travellers

    Enid Blyton

    Hardcover (Award Publications Ltd, March 15, 2007)
    None
  • The Three Strange Travellers

    Enid Blyton

    Paperback (Bounty Books, Nov. 23, 2015)
    A goat, a dog and a duck don't mke the likliest of travelling trios, do they? Find out about their adventures in this delightful collection of stories from the much-loved Enid Blyton. This magical book also tells the tales of Tippity bird's feather, Mother Hubbard's honey and the forgetful little girl. Other stories in this colume: The Roundabout Man He Wouldn't Wipe His Shoes Jane Goes Out to Stay Mr Miggle's Spectacles The Marvellous Pink Vase Goofy Isn't Very Clever and many more...
  • Stranger and Traveler

    Dorothy Clarke Wilson

    Hardcover (Little, Brown and Company, March 15, 1975)
    360 pages. 6" by 8." by 1.5 in. This book is the biography of Dorothea Dix who exposed the inhumanity of insane asylums and reformed mental instititutions.
  • Travelers

    Carla Reighard

    (Reilly Books, April 20, 2016)
    In Travelers, uncover a world where mermaids aren't myth, the city of Atlantis exists, and time travel is possible. Discover how Triana, a twenty-year-old mermaid, is thrust into time travel throughout human history to save her world from destruction. Forced to share the body of a human in the era she travels to, Triana realizes that Alexio, a merman from her world, is following her. Unable to return to her own body, and unsure if she can trust Alexio, Triana is faced with insurmountable challenges. Will she be able to save her world in time? Will she ever be able to return to her own body?
  • Travelers

    Shirley Fillmore Ness

    Paperback (AuthorHouse, Nov. 19, 2007)
    This is a picture book for your coffee table and for your grandchildren. These pictures were taken on our farm about 12 miles north of Fulton, South Dakota a few years ago when the Monarchs gathered in our yard as they were preparing to migrate. There were thousands of them that year, hanging from every tree. It was a thrill to see them. The pictures don't do justice to them, but they give you a tiny idea of what they were like. I'm sorry to say that I have never seen them like that again. The poem equates the journey of the butterflies with the journey our grandchildren make growing up to be the fine people we want them to be. They need our encouragement.
    L
  • Travelers

    Shirley Fillmore Ness

    Paperback (AUTHORHOUSE, Nov. 30, 2007)
    None