This area, in County Limerick, is supposed to be the most haunted of all Ireland." Donald Butler, twelve, perks up at these words from his father. But not enough to get over his anger and despair at his parents and annoying sister, Heather, nine. He didn't want to visit Ireland for the summer. He is still trying to get over his close friend's sudden, violent death. But soon Donald, who believes in only facts and science, is caught up with Corey, twelve, his second cousin, and Heather in a search for the Royal Cat and its treasure to save Corey's home, Clareton Court. Corey's yellow cat, the split-tailed, Mirabelle, is also involved. Donald sets out to find answers to the sundials and their mysterious mottoes, surrounding the manor. Are there connections between an old book, the mottoes, the Royal Cat and a megalith, the center stone of a large stone circle? The answer to these questions changes Donald's summer and his life.
Anne Merrill, a reluctant psychic, becomes an OSS agent in World War II and soon finds herself not only fighting the regular war but, also, a psychic war with her powerful, psychic father, Albert. He and the worldwide, ancient, secret society, the Chhayas Society (Shadows Society), are using psychic powers along with earth forces that magnify those powers to assist the Nazis. Besides honing her psychic abilities to triumph over her father, Anne, also, uses them in the regular war effort when she plays cat-and-mouse games with a female, Nazi spy in Istanbul. Later, she is thrust into the heart of the Third Reich, Berlin, when OSS penetrates the Third Reich to gain valuable inside information. During all this, Anne and fellow OSS agent, half-white, half-Navajo, Paul Bancroft, who is haunted by the shadow of a terrible, hereditary disease, fall in love. At the book's conclusion, the otherworldly battle and the ordinary battle merge into one.
It is 1980 and Bonnie Benson, twenty-seven, is annoyed when her photojournalist, identical twin brother, Kenny Benson, disrupts her vacation plans by insisting she join him in Morocco. Upon arriving, Bonnie is shocked by Kenny's discovery-World War II photographs of their parents pinned to a wall in a small bar in Tangier. So begins their exciting and dangerous quest to learn about their dead parents' past. Because their parents died in Argentina a little over a year ago in a private plane crash. And they had mysteriously filed an amended flight plan-destination Morocco. Soon the twins' quest takes them to Marrakesh but not before Bonnie meets Roger Reveson, a handsome widower, who will join them in their quest. Soon their lives are threatened by others who want to know why they are in Morocco. Amid the danger and suspense, Bonnie and Roger fall in love. At the end of the book, the past and the present collide in a perilous fashion.
Shy, small-for-his-age, twelve-year-old Gary Ryan, from Ohio, is spending the summer with his gruff grandmother in far-off Idaho. She owns a sheep ranch and is tending the sheep herself this summer. At first, Gary wishes he had never come. Then he discovers an injured coyote and meets Indus, a mysterious, young, Native American man, and Gary's summer changes from anxiety into mystery and magic. He develops a love for the spirit, freedom, and beauty of the West, along with learning about the stars and the coyote's habits. He hears comical, Native American coyote stories from Indus. Gary keeps secret his involvement with the coyote from his grandmother, until the day he realizes that he must be honest. And who is Indus? He appears and disappears as if by magic. Is he the young Native American in the legend Gary hears about? Gary discovers he's braver than he thought he was in the face of several dangers. And he returns to Ohio at the end of the summer a different boy.
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