Time Travel Diaries
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audiobook
(1)
The Time Travel Diaries
by Caroline Lawrence
read by Simon Scardifield
Part 1 of the Time Travel Diaries series
A SUNDAY TIMES CHILDREN'S BOOK OF THE WEEK
From the author of The Roman Mysteries comes a nail-biting time-travel adventure, set in Roman London - where past meets present.
Billionaire Solomon Daisy is obsessed with the skeleton of a blue eyed African girl from Roman London. When his tech guys accidentally invent a time machine he decides to send London schoolboy Alex Papas on a mission. Time travel is easier for kids, and Alex knows Greek and a little Latin. The portable portal is placed in London's Mithraeum, recently relocated back to its original 3rd century AD site. Now all Alex has to do is go through and find the blue-eyed girl.
There are just three rules:
1. Naked you go and naked you must return.
2. Drink, don't eat.
3. As little interaction as possible.
But Time Travel is fun fair, and there are more ways to die in Roman London than Alex could have guessed. Caroline's Roman Mysteries books were first published in 2001 and have since sold over a million copies in the UK alone, and been translated into fourteen languages. The series was televised by the BBC in 2007 and 2008 with ten half hour episodes. Filmed in Tunisia, Bulgaria and Malta, it was the most expensive BBC children's TV series to date.
Caroline says: "I want to know everything about the past, especially the exciting things. Also the sounds, smells, sights and tastes. I write historical novels because nobody has invented a Time Machine. And I write for kids because 11 is my inner age."
Visit Caroline's website: www.carolinelawrence.com A SUNDAY TIMES CHILDREN'S BOOK OF THE WEEK
From the million-copy-selling author of The Roman Mysteries comes a nail-biting time-travel adventure in Roman London - where past meets present. First in a gripping new time-travel adventure series, with book two to follow in 2020. TCM for Caroline's Roman Mysteries series is over 700,000 copies. Caroline dedicates two months every year to schools visits. The book features real locations - including the Mithraeum at Bank and the amphitheatre at Guildhall.
audiobook
(1)
Adventure in Athens
by Caroline Lawrence
read by Simon Scardifield
Part 2 of the Time Travel Diaries series
Alex and his friend Dinu vowed never to time-travel again . . .
But now it's summer and Alex and Dinu have been offered a luxury summer holiday in Athens. After a rooftop banquet the evening they arrive, everyone gets food poisoning and is told not to eat for 48 hours.
When Alex and Dinu feel better, they decide to stretch their legs. But the moment they step out of the hotel, their limo pulls up with their dangerous mentor Solomon Daisy who now has a new mission for them.
He wants them to go back to the 'Golden Age of Athens' - to a time when Socrates was alive and when Athens was at peace with Sparta.
The second book in Caroline Lawrence's gripping new time-travel series. Caroline's Roman Mysteries books were first published in 2001 and have since sold over a million copies in the UK alone, and been translated into fourteen languages. The series was televised by the BBC in 2007 and 2008 with ten half hour episodes. Filmed in Tunisia, Bulgaria and Malta, it was the most expensive BBC children's TV series to date.
Caroline says: "I want to know everything about the past, especially the exciting things. Also the sounds, smells, sights and tastes. I write historical novels because nobody has invented a Time Machine. And I write for kids because 11 is my inner age."
Visit Caroline's website: www.carolinelawrence.com From the million-copy-selling author of The Roman Mysteries comes a nail-biting time-travel adventure series - where past meets present. Second in a gripping new time-travel adventure series. TCM for Caroline's Roman Mysteries series is over 700,000 copies. Caroline dedicates two months every year to schools visits. The series features real locations - the London Mithraeum in book one and the Parthenon in book two. Introduces readers to a young Socrates.
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