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Books with title The Deadly Dungeon

  • The Deadly Dungeon

    Ron Roy, John Steven Gurney

    Paperback (Random House Books for Young Readers, March 3, 1998)
    Help Dink, Josh, and Ruth Rose solve mysteries from A to Z! Kids love collecting the entire alphabet and super editions! With over 8 million copies in print, the A to Z Mysteries® have been hooking chapter book readers on mysteries and reading for years. Now this classic kid favorite is back with a bright new look! D is for Dungeon . . . Get ready for a sleepover—in a castle! Soon after the kids arrive at Moose Manor in Maine, they hear strange sounds behind the walls. Does this castle have a hidden dungeon? And could it be haunted? Dink, Josh, and Ruth Rose are dying to find out!
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  • The Deadly Dungeon

    Ron Roy, John Steven Gurney

    School & Library Binding (Turtleback Books, March 3, 1998)
    FOR USE IN SCHOOLS AND LIBRARIES ONLY. Wallis Wallace, has invited Dink, Josh, and Ruth Rose for a sleepover--in a haunted castle! As soon as the young detectives arrive, they start hearing screams behind the walls. Will they discover who--or what--is haunting Moose Manor?
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  • The Deadly Dungeon

    Ron Roy

    Paperback (Scholastic, Jan. 1, 1998)
    Dink's favorite mystery writer, Wallis Wallace, has invited Dink, Josh, andRuth Rose for a sleepover - in a haunted castle! But as soon as the youngdetectives arrive, they start hearing screams behind the walls. Will theydiscover who - or what - is haunting Moose Manor?
    N
  • The Deadly Dungeon

    John Steven Gurney (Illustrator) by Ron Roy, John Steven Gurney (Illustrator)

    Mass Market Paperback (by Ron Roy, John Steven Gurney (Illustrator), John Steven Gurney (Illustrator), July 12, 2009)
    Dink's favorite mystery writer, Wallis Wallace, has invited Dink, Josh, andRuth Rose for a sleepover - in a haunted castle! But as soon as the youngdetectives arrive, they start hearing screams behind the walls. Will theydiscover who - or what - is haunting Moose Manor?
  • The Deadly Dungeon

    Ron Roy

    Library Binding (Perfection Learning, March 1, 1998)
    Dink's favorite mystery writer, Wallis Wallace, has invited Dink, Josh, and Ruth Rose for a sleepover--in a haunted castle! But as soon as the young detectives arrive, they start hearing screams behind the walls. Will they discover who--or what--is haunting Moose Manor?
    N
  • The Deadly 7

    Garth Jennings

    eBook (Farrar, Straus and Giroux (BYR), April 5, 2016)
    When eleven-year-old Nelson's beloved older sister goes missing, he is devastated. She's his only friend and means the world to him. Then his parents join the search and leave Nelson in the care of his crazy uncle Pogo, a plumber who is working at St. Paul's Cathedral in London. There in a dusty crypt Nelson stumbles across an ancient machine that accidentally extracts the so-called seven deadly sins from his soul. The machine turns them into ugly, cantankerous, and embarrassing creatures who follow him everywhere. But there is more to these monsters than meets the eye, and in this off-the-wall debut novel about making friends and taking courage, Nelson finds that these strange newcomers are just the companions he needs for a quest across the globe to rescue his big sister.
  • The Dungeon

    Lynne Reid Banks

    eBook (HarperCollinsChildren'sBooks, June 20, 2013)
    A medieval tragedy and tale of retribution – The Dungeon is a powerful story from a writer of great skill and potency.The setting is medieval Scotland, a land dominated by skirmishes and battles on the borders, a land of fortresses and castles in Scotland, England and Wales. We meet Bruce McLennan, a Scottish laird, a man sorely-changed by a terrible family tragedy. He is a domineering master, an uncaring landlord, a cruel man, who has his heart set on building himself a castle and a Dungeon in which to punish his enemies in the future. But while the dungeon is being built, McLennan plans a trip to the far ends of the earth.As we follow McLennan on his travels to China and beyond, we witness his buying of Peony, or Mudan, as her Chinese name is, a young girl who McLennan uses as a slave. He is uncaring, unsympathetic, as he drags her after him across the world. Gradually, knowing no other, Peony develops a kind of affection for her master.In Scotland, Peony meets Fin, a stable lad and a loving friendship develops between them. McLennan, busy fighting off enemies, uses Peony in an horrific scene in one of his battles; he looses badly and subsequently blames her. He decides to punish her by throwing her in his dungeon… then unfolds a ghastly scene where Peony kills herself, at last in control of her own destiny. McLennan dies of guilt, shame and remorse. Fin lives on, and even Peony, perhaps, in his new baby sister.
    R
  • The Dungeon

    Lynne Reid Banks

    Paperback (Harpercollins Pub Ltd, Oct. 31, 2003)
    A medieval tragedy and tale of retribution -- The Dungeon is a powerful story from a writer of great skill and potency. The setting is medieval Scotland, a land dominated by skirmishes and battles on the borders, a land of fortresses and castles in Scotland, England and Wales. We meet Bruce McLennan, a Scottish laird, a man sorely-changed by a terrible family tragedy. He is a domineering master, an uncaring landlord, a cruel man, who has his heart set on building himself a castle and a Dungeon in which to punish his enemies in the future. But while the dungeon is being built, McLennan plans a trip to the far ends of the earth. As we follow McLennan on his travels to China and beyond, we witness his buying of Peony, or Mudan, as her Chinese name is, a young girl who McLennan uses as a slave. He is uncaring, unsympathetic, as he drags her after him across the world. Gradually, knowing no other, Peony develops a kind of affection for her master. In Scotland, Peony meets Fin, a stable lad and a loving friendship develops between them. McLennan, busy fighting off enemies, uses Peony in an horrific scene in one of his battles; he looses badly and subsequently blames her. He decides to punish her by throwing her in his dungeon! then unfolds a ghastly scene where Peony kills herself, at last in control of her own destiny. McLennan dies of guilt, shame and remorse. Fin lives on, and even Peony, perhaps, in his new baby sister.
    R
  • The Dungeon

    Lynne Reid Banks

    Hardcover (Harpercollins Childrens Books, Oct. 1, 2002)
    From the author of The Indian in the Cupboard, a plan for revenge by a Scottish lord goes terribly awry after he travels to China, meets a young girl who becomes his tea slave, and then returns to his native land only to realize that the person he thought was his enemy is actually a very important person in his life.
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  • The Deadly 7

    Garth Jennings

    eBook (Macmillan Children's Books, Jan. 15, 2015)
    Are you ready for a monster mission?One night, deep in the catacombs of St Paul’s Cathedral, eleven-year-old Nelson stumbles across a strange and ancient machine, which accidentally extracts the seven deadly sins from his soul in the form of living breathing, grumpy, smelly monsters. Suddenly he’s stuck with seven angry, sneaky, greedy, vain, adorable, thieving, farting new friends, who help him form the best (and weirdest) plan ever: to find and rescue his missing beloved big sister . . .The Deadly 7 is a monster adventure by Garth Jennings, writer and director of animated movie Sing, and is packed full of hilarious illustrations.
  • The Deadly 7

    Garth Jennings

    Paperback (Macmillan Children's Books, March 15, 2001)
    Deadly 7
  • The Dungeon

    Lynne Reid Banks

    Paperback (Harpercollins Childs, Nov. 3, 2003)
    A medieval tragedy and tale of retribution -- The Dungeon is a powerful story from a writer of great skill and potency. The setting is medieval Scotland, a land dominated by skirmishes and battles on the borders, a land of fortresses and castles in Scotland, England and Wales. We meet Bruce McLennan, a Scottish laird, a man sorely-changed by a terrible family tragedy. He is a domineering master, an uncaring landlord, a cruel man, who has his heart set on building himself a castle and a Dungeon in which to punish his enemies in the future. But while the dungeon is being built, McLennan plans a trip to the far ends of the earth. As we follow McLennan on his travels to China and beyond, we witness his buying of Peony, or Mudan, as her Chinese name is, a young girl who McLennan uses as a slave. He is uncaring, unsympathetic, as he drags her after him across the world. Gradually, knowing no other, Peony develops a kind of affection for her master. In Scotland, Peony meets Fin, a stable lad and a loving friendship develops between them. McLennan, busy fighting off enemies, uses Peony in an horrific scene in one of his battles; he looses badly and subsequently blames her. He decides to punish her by throwing her in his dungeon! then unfolds a ghastly scene where Peony kills herself, at last in control of her own destiny. McLennan dies of guilt, shame and remorse. Fin lives on, and even Peony, perhaps, in his new baby sister.