Martha the talking dog solves two mysteries, first when she is falsely accused of eating a birthday cake and must find the real culprit, and then when she tries to find out what two suspicious-looking men are up to.
Susan Meddaugh. “WHOA!” Helen shouted. “I'm supposed to be walking you! What's going on?” “I overheard two men discussing a plot,” Martha said. “They mentioned candy . . . and babies . . . and cake! We have to act fast.
For use in schools and libraries only. Problems arise when Martha, the family dog, learns to speak after eating alphabet soup.
Belle Haven was a very exclusive and close-knit neighborhood of forty homes on a hundred-acre peninsula jutting into Long Island Sound. The Belle Haven private security force patrolled the streets around the clock and manned guard posts ...
This is a landscape that can easily deceive, a landscape that volunteers nothing, as if to say, You’re on your own, mate—much like the habitues of the only pub for miles around called The Case Has Altered.
Martha the talking dog volunteers to help patrol the streets as a K-9 officer, and she must convince her partner Officer O'Reilly something is fishy when she suspects food is being smuggled into Wagstaff City.
Susan Meddaugh. Alice smiled sheepishly. The foreign minsters rose from their chairs. “Cheater, cheater, cheater!” they chanted. Alice's stomach turned. She covered her ears. It was no use. All she could hear was the horrible truth: ...
... Heidi Coleman, photo archivist at the Noguchi Foundation and Garden Museum; Aaron Copland Collection at the Library of Congress; Jan and Sandra's stalwart agent George Nicholson; our brilliant editor, creative advisor, ...
A collarless Martha lands in an animal shelter and makes new animal friends on whose behalf she organizes a dog show to help them find families.
Heminway brings together essays written by legal scholars specializing in white collar crime, corporate law, and securities regulation concerning the varied legal claims made against Martha Stewart in connection with...
When the current owner of the soup company breaks the founder's promise to have every letter of the alphabet in every can of soup, Martha, the talking dog, takes action.