- Title:
-
The Sackville Street Caper & The Curious Case of the Irish Yeti (MP3)
- Series:
-
Molly Malone & Bram Stoker
- Written by:
-
Alan Nolan
- Read by:
-
Christopher Simpson
- Format:
-
Unabridged MP3 CD Audio Book
- Number of CDs:
-
1
- Duration:
-
5 hours 52 minutes
- MP3 size:
-
255 MB
- Published:
-
February 28 2024
- Available Date:
-
February 28 2024
- Age Category:
-
Children (10+)
- ISBN:
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9781038666178
- Genres:
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Fiction; Adventure; Children; Children's Fiction
- Publisher:
-
Bolinda/O'Brien audio
Qty
Format
Price
Bolinda price
Irish Author
Two exciting adventure stories of Molly Malone and Bram Stoker from the author of Sam Hannigan series.
The Sackville Street Caper: Dublin, 1858. Bram Stoker: boy seeking adventure (and things to write about) Molly Malone: part-time fishmonger and full-time sneak thief! When Bram runs away from boarding school and meets streetwise Molly, he finds all the excitement he's ever wanted. Together they explore the city, with its Sackville Street spooks, hoodlums and heroes – and let's not forget the very creepy Count Vladimir Grof-Constantin de Lugosi. As Bram looks for inspiration for the famous book he has yet to write – Dracula – our two heroes stumble upon a dastardly plot to steal … the Irish Crown Jewels!
The Curious Case of the Irish Yeti: Dublin’s dogs are mysteriously disappearing! No guard dogs mean thieves are running riot, and with no sheepdogs to herd the animals in Smithfield market, the city is overrun with sheep and goats … and even worse, Dublin’s cats are having an absolute field day! The dwindling doggy population is being blamed on a curious creature known as the Irish Yeti. Bram Stoker, Molly Malone and the Sackville Street Spooks are fascinated by this mysterious monster, but when Molly’s own dog goes missing, the friends decide enough is enough – they have to go on the trail of the Yeti.
'From the clever chapter titles to the infinitely interesting characters (including the lovable Billy the Pan), Nolan has married attention to detail with a dollop of cinematic fun.' (on The Sackville Street Caper)
The Irish Times
'Brilliant characters, puns and wordplay galore, rotten fish, nappies, ghosts ...' (on The Sackville Street Caper)
Irish Independent