Join us on a literary world trip!
Add this book to bookshelf
Grey
Write a new comment Default profile 50px
Grey
Subscribe to read the full book or read the first pages for free!
All characters reduced
The Tower Treasure (translated) - cover

The Tower Treasure (translated)

Franklin W. Dixon

Publisher: Anna Ruggieri

  • 0
  • 0
  • 0

Summary

- This edition is unique;
- The translation is completely original and was carried out for the Ale. Mar. SAS;
- All rights reserved.
The Tower Treasure is the first book in the Hardy boys series of novels, first published in 1927. This installment follows brothers Frank and Joe Hardy as they become embroiled in a series of mysterious events in their hometown. After narrowly avoiding an accident with a red-haired driver, they find themselves entangled in a robbery and the disappearance of a friend's car. Suspicions arise when a significant theft occurs at the Tower Mansion, implicating the caretaker, Henry Robinson. As the Hardys delve deeper into the case, they uncover clues that lead them to a notorious criminal known for his disguises. With determination and resourcefulness, they work to solve the mystery, ultimately leading to a surprising revelation and a resolution that restores justice.
Available since: 06/13/2024.

Other books that might interest you

  • Persephone's Children - A Life in Fragments - cover

    Persephone's Children - A Life...

    Rowan McCandless

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    After years of secrecy and silence, Rowan McCandless leaves an abusive relationship and rediscovers her voice and identity through writing. 
     
     
     
    She was never to lie to him. She was never to leave him; and she was never supposed to tell. 
     
     
     
    Persephone's Children chronicles Rowan McCandless's odyssey as a Black, biracial woman escaping the stranglehold of a long-term abusive relationship. Through a series of thematically linked and structurally inventive essays, McCandless explores the fraught and fragmented relationship between memory and trauma. Multiple mythologies emerge to bind legacy and loss, motherhood and daughterhood, racism and intergenerational trauma, mental illness and resiliency. 
     
     
     
    It is only in the aftermath that she can begin to see the patterns in her history, hear the echoes of oppression passed down from unknown, unnamed ancestors, and discover her worth and right to exist in the world.
    Show book
  • The Thicket's Prodigy - The Extraordinary Life of an Improbable Genius - cover

    The Thicket's Prodigy - The...

    Ronald Brock

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    The 3:15 train left Polk County on September 2, 1930, carrying a most extraordinary passenger. Eugene H “Gene” Brock, a genius of the type about whom astounding stories are told, was leaving East Texas – one of the country’s most backward impoverished areas. 
    His destination – Texas Technological College. 
    What Gene didn’t know was one day he would achieve a unique status, one attained by only a most select few – as an internationally acknowledge expert in two of science’s newest fields: nuclear energy relating to fission and the bomb that ended World War II, and high-powered computer systems – the likes of which put a man on the Moon. 
    Gene’s story is brought to life by his son, Ronald, and has humble beginnings in Texas’ “Big Thicket.” It follows the young Gene, born a fifth-generation progeny of East Texas subsistence farmers, and the hardships he endured through the Great Depression which kept him homeless for much of the time he was earning his degree in mathematics and physics. 
    A burning desire to master new challenges led Gene to Los Alamos and a pivotal role in redesigning the Manhattan Project’s atomic bomb. But one scientific challenge wasn’t enough. Gene became an acknowledged expert when computers evolved into another scientific discovery of significant importance. 
    Once again sought after by the federal government, Gene received a congressional appointment to serve as Director of Computation and Analysis in NASA’s manned spaceflight project – the project that enabled Neil Armstrong’s walk on the Moon. 
    As a fitting epilogue to his father’s extraordinary story, the author tells of his own key role in another scientific adaptation when the technology of the World Wide Web was introduced and became known across the globe as the Internet. And the term “startup company” became the scientific phenomenon of the 1990s. 
     
    Show book
  • Sky's Story - Thrown Away Children Book 5 - cover

    Sky's Story - Thrown Away...

    Louise Allen

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    When Sky and her older sister Avril were taken into care, the social workers knew this was a case like no other. Raised by unhinged parents who hoarded compulsively, creating horrific conditions no child should live in, the two girls arrived at foster carer Louise's home, neglected, malnourished, and indoctrinated. Louise had to draw on all of her experience as one of Britain's leading foster carers to rehabilitate and change the course of their lives. 
     
    But with constant attempts to thwart her work, Louise ends up under siege in her own home. Will she succeed or is their fate sealed forever?
    Show book
  • The Top 10 Short Stories – The 19th Century – The British & Irish Men - The top ten Short Stories of the 19th Century written by British and Irish male authors - cover

    The Top 10 Short Stories – The...

    Robert Louis Stevenson, Charles...

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    Short stories have always been a sort of instant access into an author’s brain, their soul and heart.  A few pages can lift our lives into locations, people and experiences with a sweep of landscape, narration, feelings and emotions that is difficult to achieve elsewhere. 
     
    In this series we try to offer up tried and trusted ‘Top Tens’ across many different themes and authors. But any anthology will immediately throw up the questions – Why that story? Why that author?  
     
    The theme itself will form the boundaries for our stories which range from well-known classics, newly told, to stories that modern times have overlooked but perfectly exemplify the theme.  Throughout the volume our authors whether of instant recognition or new to you are all leviathans of literature. 
     
    Some you may disagree with but they will get you thinking; about our choices and about those you would have made.  If this volume takes you on a path to discover more of these miniature masterpieces then we have all gained something. 
     
    In these Isles of Imperial Empire the English language is now the lingua franca of the globe.  But between the Home nations tensions remain, they rise and fall, all is not well.  Authors born abroad and returning have new views, unique, a little off-kilter and literature feeds well on this fuel.  Together the men of these islands produce literature of quite sumptuous quality. 
     
    1 - The Top 10 - The British & Irish Men - The 19th Century - An Introduction 
    2 - The Body Snatcher by Robert Louis Stevenson 
    3 - The Signalman by Charles Dickens 
    4 - The Withered Arm by Thomas Hardy 
    5 - The Canterville Ghost - Part 1 by Oscar Wilde 
    6 - The Canterville Ghost - Part 2 by Oscar Wilde 
    7 - The Phantom Rickshaw by Rudyard Kipling 
    8 - The Dream Woman by Wilkie Collins 
    9 - The Story of B24 by Arthur Conan Doyle 
    10 - The Inconsiderate Waiter by J M Barrie 
    11 - Lost Hearts by M R James 
    12 - Youth - Part 1 by Joseph Conrad 
    13 - Youth - Part 2 by Joseph Conrad
    Show book
  • ELON MUSK: Visionary of the future - cover

    ELON MUSK: Visionary of the future

    Elias Montreau

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    Whether you're an aspiring entrepreneur, a tech enthusiast, or simply fascinated by game-changing leaders, Elon Musk: A Biography offers an inspiring and thought-provoking narrative of one of the most influential figures of the 21st century.
    
    This audiobook is an independent biographical work based entirely on publicly available information, reputable sources, and historical records. It does not contain private, confidential, or unpublished details about the subject. The content has been carefully researched to ensure accuracy, but it does not claim to represent an official or authorized biography. Any opinions expressed are based on analysis of public records, statements, and documented events. This audiobook is intended for informational and educational purposes only.
    Show book
  • Aristocratic Education - From their pens to your ears genius in every story - cover

    Aristocratic Education - From...

    Stephen Leacock

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    Stephen P H Butler Leacock FRSC was born on the 30th December 1869 in Swanmore, near Southampton, England, the third of eleven children. 
    The family emigrated to Canada in 1876 to live on a 100-acre farm in Sutton, Ontario.  There Leacock was home-schooled and later enrolled into the elite private school Upper Canada College in Toronto.  Academically he was very strong and enrolled at the University of Toronto to study languages and literature.  He left there after his alcoholic father abandoned the family and finances were too stretched to continue his attendance.  He now enrolled in a three-month course at Strathroy Collegiate Institute to become a qualified high school teacher and with it a regular income. 
    Leacock published humorous articles in many Canadian and US magazines but his real passion was economics and political theory.  In 1899 he enrolled for postgraduate studies at the University of Chicago and earned his PhD in 1903. 
    His marriage to Beatrix Hamilton produced a single child 15 years later.  Over time father and son developed a love-hate relationship, partially caused by his son’s diminutive stature of only four feet.  
    He accepted a post at McGill University and kept it until he retired in 1936.  His work ‘Elements of Political Science’, was adopted as a standard textbook for two decades and was also his most profitable.  He now also began public speaking and lecturing.  
    In 1910, he privately printed some articles as ‘Literary Lapses’.  It was then released by a recognised publisher, and he became a commercially successful writer.  His collections of light-hearted whimsy, parody, nonsense, and satire were now frequently published along with biographies and several award-winning volumes on Canada. 
    Politically Leacock was a difficult creature.  He opposed women’s right to vote, was a champion of Empire but advocated social welfare legislation and wealth redistribution, but he often caused friction with his racist views. 
    Leacock has been forgotten as an economist, but it’s often said that in 1911 more people had heard of him than had heard of Canada.  For the decade after 1915 Leacock was the most popular humorist in the English-speaking world. 
    Stephen Leacock died on 28th March 1944 of throat cancer in Toronto, Canada.  He was 74.
    Show book