The Maze of Bones (The 39 Clues Series #1) by Rick Riordan: Item Cover
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The Maze of Bones (The 39 Clues Series #1) by Rick Riordan, David Pittu (Read by)

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  • Age Range: 9 to 12
  • Pub. Date: September 2008
  • Sales Rank: 696,622

    Reader Rating: (158 ratings)

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    Product Details

    • Pub. Date: September 2008
    • Publisher: Playaway
    • Format: Other Format
    • Sales Rank: 696,622
    • Age Range: 9 to 12

    Synopsis

    Minutes before she died Grace Cahill changed her will, leaving her decendants an impossible decision: "You have a choice - one million dollars or a clue."

    Grace is the last matriarch of the Cahills, the world's most powerful family. Everyone from Napoleon to Houdini is related to the Cahills, yet the source of the family power is lost. 39 clues hidden around the world will reveal the family's secret, but no one has been able to assemble them. Now the clues race is on, and young Amy and Dan must decide what's important: hunting clues or uncovering what REALLY happened to their parents.

    The 39 Clues is Scholastic's groundbreaking new series, spanning 10 adrenaline-charged books, 350 trading cards, and an online game where readers play a part in the story and compete for over $100,000 in prizes.

    The 39 Clues books set the story, and the cards, website and game allow kids to participate in it. Kids visit the website - www.the39clues.com - and discover they are lost members of the Cahill family. They set up online accounts where they can compete against other kids and against Cahill characters to find all 39 clues. Through the website, kids can track their points and clues, manage their card collections, dig through the Cahill archives for secrets and "travel" the world to collect Cahill artifacts, interview characters, and hunt down clues. Collecting cards helps: Each card is a piece of evidence containing information on a Cahill, a clue, or a family secret.

    Every kid is a winner - we'll give away prizes through books, the website and the cards, including a grand prize of $25,000!

    NARRATED by David Pittu

    Publishers Weekly

    Built around a ripe conceit-wealthy matriarch scatters cryptic clues to a mysterious fortune around the globe-this first installment in a projected 10-book series is tons of fun. Lead-off hitter Riordan (The Lightning Thief) mixes just the right proportions of suspense, peril and puzzles in a fast-paced read (Riordan mapped the narrative arc for all 10 volumes, but other high-profile authors will be writing for the series, too). Likable orphans Amy and Dan Cahill have moxie (plus Dan can memorize numbers instantly) and frailties (Amy hates crowds). As the siblings compete with less honorable members of the Cahill clan, all distantly related to Benjamin Franklin, to win the fortune by collecting all 39 clues (only two are found in this first book), they learn about their dead parents, each other and world history. The humor is spot on-one uncle is credited with inventing the microwave burrito. The only flaw? The story does not end so much as drop off a cliff. (The second book, One False Note by Gordon Korman, is set to arrive in December.) While waiting, readers can collect cards, each of which contains evidence, and play the online game (www.the39clues.com), for which Scholastic is offering over $100,000 in prizes. This ought to have as much appeal to parents as it does to kids-it's Webkinz without the stuffed animals, and a rollicking good read. Ages 9-12. (Sept.)

    Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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    Biography

    Rick Riordan is best known for his bestselling YA series Percy Jackson and the Olympians and for a series of award-winning adult mysteries featuring San Antonio P.I. Tres Navarre.

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    Customer Reviews

    Amazing charactersby James-Black

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    October 26, 2009: That is the part i enjoyed the most about the book to be honest. The way the siblings interacted with each other and their mood swings was pretty funny. I am not going to read any more of them though because they are really not for my age hahaha i was just curious...

    This book was pretty goodby Anonymous

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    September 01, 2009: I think this book was alright. It wasn't the best book I have read by the author, Rick Riordan, but it was pretty good. Some times it was hard to comprehend what Rick meant, but at other times in the book there was so mush detail that I can imagine the picture in my head.

    Although it wasn't my favorite book, I would still recommend it to a friend. I like how once the main characters, Dan and Amy Cahill, think they have some kind of lead or a new clue, they found out they only have a tiny piece of a huge puzzle. I also like how whenever you least expect some thing to happen, a trap or some thing startling comes out of no where. One example is when Dan and Amy are in a secret library with their uncle and they find a book that they believe is the answer to the 1st, then they realize the house is burning down and their uncle has escaped with the book. Its cool to me how they constantly find out they are out numbered or in some kind of danger and then some miracle happens and they survive.

    I also might read "The Tales of Greek Heroes" because after reading about the book and some the customer reviews, it sounds like an interesting book to try out.

    I Also Recommend: The Last Olympian (Percy Jackson and the Olympians Series #5), The Titan's Curse (Percy Jackson and the Olympians Series #3), The Battle of the Labyrinth (Percy Jackson and the Olympians Series #4), The Lightning Thief (Percy Jackson and the Olympians Series #1).


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