He Walks through Dimensions

 “Interworld” Series by Neil Gaiman and Michael Reaves

  1. Interworld
  2. The Silver Dream
  3. Eternity’s Wheel

Yes; a fast-moving imaginative story about fighting evil.

Recommended age: 12 – 14; 14 – 16; 16 – 18; Adult

Joey is walking around town on a school assignment when he walks through a fog and finds himself in a world very much like his world, but somehow different.   Suddenly attacked by futuristic raiders, he escapes with the aid of an unusual-looking man wearing a mask.   However, his escape brings him to a world where he is already dead.  Then, before he can process this, he is captured by pirates who take him up to space.   Rescued again, he finds out that he is a Walker—a person capable of passing through dimensions.  He joins Interworld in their battle against the futuristic Binary and the evil, magical HEX pirates.  In the second book, Joey meets a Time Traveler from the Time Watch organization who intervenes in Joey’s time frustrating the plans of Binary and HEX.   In the third book, Joey leads the fight to stop Binary and HEX’s universe-destroying plans.

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The Story Behind the Story

Down the Mysterly River

 by Bill Willingham

A story about a boy and three talking animals wandering through a strange land pursued by an unknown ruthless enemy.

Recommended age: 10 – 12; 12 – 14

Max wakes up in a wood not knowing where he is.   As he walks along he finds a talking badger.   Thinking he is in a dream, they travel together until the evening when Max builds a campfire.  Suddenly a wild cat runs through their clearing pursued by a man and two dogs.   The man and his two dogs then turn on Max with clear evil intent.  Fighting for their lives, Max, the badger and the cat set off on a trek toward a promised sanctuary dogged by their enemies the entire way.

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Running Rum and Courting Danger

Black Duck by Janet Taylor Lisle

An intriguing look at the Prohibition Era.

Recommended age: 14 – 16; 16 – 18; Adult.  

Ruben and his friend — two fourteen-year olds — find a dead body on the beach.  This is the heart of Prohibition rum-running.   The small-town smugglers are running alcohol, and then things get more and more dangerous as bigger and bigger gangs work on muscling their way into the lucrative smuggling.

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Fighting Nazis and Pirates

“Adventure Through Time” series by Ted Bell

  1. Nick of Time
  2. The Time Pirate

Complex and exciting time travel stories.

Recommended age: 12 – 14; 14 – 16; 16 – 18; Adult

Nick lives in a lighthouse on the edge of a British Island next to France during the days before World War II.   His father is engaged with a group of “bird watchers” who are monitoring suspicious German submarine and air movements through the channel.  Seeking to help his father, Nick discovers a new German secret submarine.   At the same time, he meets a vicious pirate, William Blood, from the early 19th century who is after a mysterious chest that Nick had just found on the shore of his island.    In the second book, Nick continues his fight against the Germans, including using an old Sopwith Camel that he and his friend, Gunner, have restored.   Nick also goes back to 1781 to rescue his sister from Captain Blood and stop Captain Blood’s attempt to change history.

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Secrets of the Past Call From Venice

Tregaron’s Daughter by Madeleine Brent

An interesting romance set in 1910 England.

Recommended age: 14 – 16; 16 – 18; Adult.

Caterina (Cadi) Tregaron was the daughter of a fisherman in Cornwall not long after the turn of the 20th century. Though her father was true Cornish through and through, her mother’s mother was different.  During his travels in Italy, Cadi’s grandfather had found Cadi’s grandmother, then a young woman, stuffed in a sack and unconscious, sinking in the waters around Naples. But that doesn’t have much to do with Cadi, or so she thinks. When her father dies suddenly and she is left an orphan, she is taken into the family of Mr. Morton — a kind, relatively wealthy gentleman whose life she and her father had saved. While living with them, they discover a surprising secret of her grandmother’s past, sending her to visit Venice with her adopted family. But beneath the sunny surface of Venice there lies darkness and deceit, and Cadi is troubled by strange dreams, haunted by Mr. Morton’s mysterious nephew, Lucien Farrel.

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Love, Truth and Adventure in a Magical World

“Tales of Goldstone Wood” series by Anne Stengl

  1. Heartless
  2. Veiled Rose
  3. Moonblood
  4. Starflower
  5. Dragonwitch

5.5. Goddess Tithe

  1. Shadow Hand
  2. Golden Daughter
  • Draven’s Light

8.1 Poison Crown: The Smallman’s Heir, Volume 1 (Not yet published and Not Reviewed)

8.2 Poison Crown: The House of Lights, Volume 2 (Not yet published and Not Reviewed)

Excellent fantasy with strong Christian themes.

Recommended age: 12 – 14; 14 – 16; 16 – 18; Adult

In Heartless, Una is waiting for her suitors to come.  A few she rejects, some she wants but cannot have.   Only one really loves her.  In the meantime, a great dragon has been working his way from the south— ravaging nations, looking for her.   She discovers why when she learns what is really in her heart.   By then she has given up hope: her country invaded and defeated, her father and brother in danger of death.   But, there is one who still pursues her with the goal of saving her and her land. The second and third books fill out the first book from the viewpoint of a jester from the first book. The fourth book goes into the back story of two characters from the first three books. The fifth book continues the story in the fourth book. The novella “Goddess Tithe” takes place during the second book. The sixth book binds characters from both the past storyline and the future storyline together. The seventh book continues the storyline shortly after the events of the sixth book. The novella “Draven’s Light” takes place way before any of the other books.

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The Rats Don’t Have A Chance

“Spy Mice” series by Heather Vogel Frederick

  1. The Black Paw
  2. For Your Paws Only
  3. Goldwhiskers

Fun stories of Glory and the Spy Mice agency and Glory’s human friend Ozymandius.

Recommended age: 8 – 10; 10 – 12; 12 – 14

In Black Paw, Glory, a young mouse, is in trouble because she has messed up and lost the Kiss of Death to Dupont, the evil leader of the rats.   At the same time, Oz is having trouble with school bullies.   But when Glory and Oz team up, things start to happen.   In Paws, Oz and DB go to New York to compete in a contest, and Glory and Bunson go to New York to foil the plans of a gathering of the most evil rats in the world.  In Goldwhiskers, a large rat in London uses orphan mouslings, including one named “Twist” to steal jewels and other valuables.   Oz, D.B. and Glory are in London for a trip, and get involved when Oz and D.B. are implicated in one especially notorious theft by the rat and his helpers.

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Hope Among the Thorns

The Castle Behind Thorns by Merrie Haskell

An interesting story about a castle that has suffered for the sins of the occupants.

Recommended age: 12 – 14; 14 – 16

Sand wakes up in a Castle that is surrounded by an impenetrable thorny hedge.  He had already been told that the castle had been abandoned due to an earthquake — but as he walks around it, he discovers that the truth is much more complicated.   Then he finds a girl in the castle, and her story is even more unusual.  Together, they work to bring healing to themselves, the castle, and, perhaps, the land.

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Aliens Ransack Town

The Doom Machine

by Mark Teague

A humorous story about aliens.

Recommended age: 10 – 12; 12 – 14; 14 – 16;

When Isadora Shumway and her mother arrive in the small town of Vern Hollow, they are surprised to find it almost completely deserted. They don’t have long to ponder the situation, however, as their car suddenly breaks down. They manage to get it to a repair shop, which is staffed by a teenage boy. His name is Jack Creedle, and as the Shumways talk to him they find out what happened to the rest of the town’s population. Apparently, the previous night Vern Hollow had been invaded by aliens. They’re led by the villainous Captain Xaafuun, who has been ordered to bring back a certain item to her home planet. The only problem is, she has no idea what the item is. As the aliens proceed to ransack the town, Jack and Isadora may be the only ones who can stop them.

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Memories Can Be Dangerous

Escape from Memory by Margaret Peterson Haddix

An interesting story about a teenage girl with strange memories.

Recommended age: 12 or older.

Kira Landon thought she was an ordinary girl until one fateful day at one of the weekly sleepovers at her friend Lynne’s house.  Nothing unusual at first. But then it happened. Bored with the sappy drama movies they usually watch, one of the girls suggests trying hypnotism, and Kira is volunteered to be the victim. But instead of getting info on her latest crush, Kira’s friends hear her reciting a strange, exciting memory from a forgotten past. And Kira is determined to dig deep down into her roots to figure it out. But when Kira’s mom disappears, and a woman, calling herself Kira’s Aunt Memory pops up at Kira’s door, it appears she has dug deeper than she should have, and Kira isn’t certain she can ever get out.

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