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Books with title The Sign of the Green Falcon

  • The Sign of the Falcon

    Carolyn Keene

    language (Aladdin, Jan. 1, 2013)
    Nancy's father has been kidnapped in New York City, and Nancy may be his last chance to come out of it alive.
    M
  • The Sign of the Green Falcon

    Cynthia Harnett

    Library Binding (Lerner Pub Group, July 1, 1984)
    As apprentice to Dick Whittington, Mayor of London, Dickon finds himself unwittingly involved in a plot against King Henry V.
  • The SIGN OF THE FALCON

    Carolyn Keene

    Paperback (Aladdin, Feb. 1, 1996)
    After her father, Carson Drew, travels to New York to hear a friend's shocking deathbed confession, he disappears, and Nancy must uncover a murder mystery that is twenty years old. Original.
    M
  • Sign of the Green Dragon

    C. Lee McKenzie

    Paperback (CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform, May 7, 2016)
    Sam's sure something's lurking in the shadows. A skeleton's map may lead to treasure or death. Evil-hearted thieves are out to trap him. Will he get out this alive? After six months in a new school, Sam’s finally fitting in. He’s the one kid with enough talent to hit the winning home run and bring the baseball trophy back to Haggarty Elementary. But Sam’s guardian is shipping him off to boarding school before that can happen. When teammates, Joey and Roger, hear his bad news, they plot to hide him until the big game. Their secret cave is a perfect place until an earthquake shatters a wall and reveals a wooden chest with a red-eyed dragon carved into its top.Inside, a bony hand clutches a map with a note, promising treasure. With Joey and Roger, Sam sets off to track down the clues and hopefully discover that treasure. When some puzzle pieces start to make sense, the boys become lost in a labyrinth of underground tunnels, trapped by dangerous thieves and sealed inside an airless tomb. Sign of the Green Dragon gets a high five from the San Francisco Review of Books for fantasy, fun and some fearsome adventure. If you like intrepid would-be knights on impossible and dangerous quests, you’ll love this story. As one reader says, this book, “has more twists than a dragon’s tail.” Buy now to jump into the adventure.
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  • Sign of the Green Arrow

    Roy J. (Roy Judson) Snell

    language (, Feb. 6, 2014)
    It was midnight. Johnny Thompson paced the deck of the Sea Nymph alone. He would be doing this until daybreak. The tropical night was glorious. There was a faint breeze—just enough to ripple the waters where the phosphorescent light thrown off by a million tiny creatures rivaled the stars above.“Spooky,” he thought, meditatively. “Out here all alone with the night.... Natives over there.” He faced the east, where dark green hills loomed out of the water. Over there was a small island. Johnny never had been there. Some time he’d get into a canoe and paddle over. Earlier in the evening he had seen a light, a white man’s light, he had thought, without knowing why. He—His thoughts were interrupted by someone moving, up forward. Or was there? He had supposed they all were asleep—the strange old man, bony and tall, with goggle eyes and heavy glasses, the tall young man and the blonde girl. They all had berths forward. The captain and mate were aft; the native crew, below deck. There was no need for any of the crew, now. The boat was anchored. Only he, Johnny Thompson, was needed, to keep watch for prowlers of the sea, or signs of a storm.It was strange, this new job. He was not sure just what these people were planning—some scientific expedition, he thought. The ship’s outfit was rather irregular, but he had been glad of the chance to sign up as watch. He loved the sea.“Someone—” he said to himself, “—is moving, up there.” He started forward, cautiously.
  • SIGN OF THE GREEN ARROW

    Roy J. Snell

    language (, Feb. 16, 2014)
    A mystery story.
  • Sign of the Green Arrow

    Roy Snell

    language (, Feb. 2, 2014)
    A Mystery Story
  • Sign of the Green Arrow

    Roy J. (Roy Judson) Snell

    language (, Feb. 6, 2014)
    It was midnight. Johnny Thompson paced the deck of the Sea Nymph alone. He would be doing this until daybreak. The tropical night was glorious. There was a faint breeze—just enough to ripple the waters where the phosphorescent light thrown off by a million tiny creatures rivaled the stars above.
  • Sign of the Falcon

    Carolyn Keene

    Library Binding (Econo-Clad Books, Feb. 15, 1996)
    None
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  • Sign of the Green Arrow

    Roy J. Snell

    Paperback (A Roy J. Snell Book, March 3, 2016)
    Roy J. Snell (1878-1959) authored at least 85 Young Adult novels under his own name and as by David O'Hara, James Craig, and Joseph Marino, most of them specifically directed to boys, though he wrote at least one series of mysteries for girls. His tales for younger children, beginning with Little White Fox and his Arctic Friends (1916), are animal fantasies.
  • Sign of the Green Arrow

    Roy J. Snell, D.L. Roberts

    (, May 9, 2014)
    A sailor standing watch aboard a scientific schooner off the coast of Haiti observes a series of green lights in the shape of an arrow coming from the island's interior. In time he concludes that the lights are some kind of code. Since no other vessels are in the area, he deduces the lights are being flashed by spies aimed at a submarine. In time, he concludes his deductions are correct and he becomes determined to locate the source of the mysterious green arrow lights. When a local girl is kidnapped, the sailor and other crew members discover a nest of spies and rescue the girl who has been abducted aboard the enemy submarine. The faint tropical breezes are balmy, the nights are glorious, and the waters ripple all the while sinister forces, prior to World War II, are at work planning to turn this idyllic island into a naval base from which to launch subversive activities.
  • Sign Of The Green Arrow

    Roy J Snell

    Paperback (CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform, Aug. 30, 2014)
    A Great Undersea Adventure for Young Readers from the Golden Age! "It was midnight. Johnny Thompson paced the deck of the Sea Nymph alone. He would be doing this until daybreak. The tropical night was glorious. There was a faint breeze-just enough to ripple the waters where the phosphorescent light thrown off by a million tiny creatures rivaled the stars above. 'Spooky,' he thought, meditatively. 'Out here all alone with the night.... Natives over there.' He faced the east, where dark green hills loomed out of the water. Over there was a small island. Johnny never had been there. Some time he'd get into a canoe and paddle over. Earlier in the evening he had seen a light, a white man's light, he had thought, without knowing why. He- His thoughts were interrupted by someone moving, up forward. Or was there? He had supposed they all were asleep-the strange old man, bony and tall, with goggle eyes and heavy glasses, the tall young man and the blonde girl. They all had berths forward. The captain and mate were aft; the native crew, below deck. There was no need for any of the crew, now. The boat was anchored. Only he, Johnny Thompson, was needed, to keep watch for prowlers of the sea, or signs of a storm. It was strange, this new job. He was not sure just what these people were planning-some scientific expedition, he thought. The ship's outfit was rather irregular, but he had been glad of the chance to sign up as watch. He loved the sea. 'Someone-' he said to himself, '-is moving, up there.' He started forward, cautiously."