Ads
related to: book series for elementary boys and teens
Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
The Hardy Boys: Franklin W. Dixon: 1927–2005 58 The Clues Brothers: Franklin W. Dixon: 1997–2000 17 The Hardy Boys: Undercover Brothers: Franklin W. Dixon: 2005–2012 40 The Hardy Boys Adventures: Franklin W. Dixon: 2013–2023 23 The Familiars: Adam Jay Epstein and Andrew Jacobson 2010–2013 4 The Black Stallion: Walter Farley and Steven ...
Alex and Brett Harris wrote the best-selling book Do Hard Things (2008), a non-fiction book challenging teenagers to "rebel against low expectations", at age 19. Two years later came a follow-up book called Start Here (2010). Georgette Heyer (1902–1974) wrote The Black Moth when she was 17 and received a publishing contract when she was 18 ...
The Hardy Boys Secret Files is a series begun in 2010 by the publisher Simon & Schuster under their Aladdin imprint. It features the Hardy Boys, Frank and Joe, as grade-school detectives. Three new titles are published yearly as paperback books and eBooks. This series rebooted in 2016 as the Hardy Boys Clue Book series. Trouble at the Arcade
Little Pretty Pocket-book: John Newbery: 1744 [16] Little Goody Two Shoes: Oliver Goldsmith: 1765 [17] Lessons for Children: Anna Laetitia Barbauld: 1778-9: The first series of age-adapted reading primers for children printed with large text and wide margins; in print for over a century. [18] The History of Sandford and Merton: Thomas Day: 1783-9
Edward Stratemeyer, creator of the Hardy Boys and founder of the Stratemeyer Syndicate. Each volume is penned by a ghostwriter under the pseudonym Franklin W. Dixon. [22] In accordance with the customs of Stratemeyer Syndicate series production, ghostwriters for the Syndicate signed contracts that have sometimes been interpreted as requiring authors to sign away all rights to authorship or ...
This is distinct from series of children's books in general, which are categorized more broadly under Category:Series of children's books.Juvenile series are usually books written for a young adult audience beginning in the late 19th century, which feature a formulaic plot, continuing characters, and a positive conclusion.