Tree Root Cavern and the Cryptic Discovery by D. B. Magee

A worldly and unworldly adventure story

Tree root cavern and the cryptic discovery

When four new friends stumble upon a cavern at the bottom of a large Baobab tree in the back yard of the Walborgs’ foster home, they make a startling discovery that sets them on a supernatural journey.

 

Follow along as Ryan, Lisa, and the nerdy twins, Stacy and William solve secret codes, incur the wrath of ghostly pirates, escape demon spirits, encounter villainous thugs, and ultimately discover the celestial land of spirit children.

 

Find out what they learn and see if they succeed in performing the greatest humanitarian mission of all time!

Genre: JUVENILE FICTION / Religious / Christian / Action & Adventure

Secondary Genre: JUVENILE FICTION / Action & Adventure / General

Language: English

Keywords:

Word Count: 68,550

Sales info:

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Sample text:

Just as the aircraft reached its limits of lift from the air current off the mountainside, the girls came into view, skimming across the water on the jet-ski, their hair whipping in the wind behind them while the breeze carried their giggles to the boys above. Stacy slowed the watercraft as the girls neared the shoreline.

Ryan nudged his sidekick. “Hey Willy, look over yonder.” He gestured with his head toward the girls.

William looked, and saw Lisa and Stacy, talking merrily as their craft coasted slowly over the rippling waves below.

Ryan made a dive bomb motion with his hand—a mischievous grin followed.

William, with an equally impish grin of his own, swung the plane wide over Walborg Lake. The silent attacker glistened high above.

“Uh-oh!” Stacy exclaimed. “Hold on. I’m turning around!”

Lisa tightened her hold, extra tight, with her good arm around Stacy’s waist. Her life vest, however, made it difficult to get a good grip. “Why?” she asked, looking over Stacy’s shoulder for the cause of her friend’s concern. “What’s wrong?”

“I think William’s up to something!”

Lisa glanced up the butte toward the seemingly innocent boys on the terrace above. “What gives you that idea?”

“I can feel it!” Stacy said, whipping the watercraft around.

Lisa leaned close to Stacy’s ear. “You can feel it?” she shouted, over the engine’s whine.

“It’s a twin thing,” Stacy shouted, back. “Take my word for it. We’d better get out of here—and now!” Stacy aimed for the other end of the lake.


Book translation status:

The book is available for translation into any language except those listed below:

LanguageStatus
Portuguese
Translation in progress. Translated by Pedro Rodrigues

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