At first, Johnny Dixon doesn't believe Professor Childermass's story about Evaristus Sloane, the insane invention of a fiendish, baseball-pitching robot. Then Johnny sees faces at his window at night and senses he's being followed. Old Sloane has invented a new, improved robot, and he only needs one thing to bring it to life - Johnny's eyes!
Sam wants to build a killer robot.
Image II Judith Rossell's first novel was Jack Jones and the Pirate Curse, a riotous piratical adventure full of swashbuckling thrills. Sam and the Killer Robot is her second. Judith is best known for I Spy with Inspector Stilton and ...
Sam and the Killer Robot
More Than 375 Short Student-Written Book Reviews of Popular Children's Titles Scholastic Professional Books, ... 372 pages BIOGRAPHY FRIENDSHIP & FAMILY HISTORY Farmer Boy by Laura Ingalls Wilder Farmer Boy is about a boy , Almanzo ...
"This academic text brings together, in one volume, the most recent and innovative accounts of liability in war.
At home , as Corky prepares to take a bath , one of her friends attempts to attack her . ... Young teens who like horror series books such as The Power series by Jesse Harris or Caroline Cooney's Trilogy will find this story creates the ...
creating a decentralised network of intelligent automatic killers. ... regulation with respect to what aspect will eventually prevail. machines will never absolve us from our responsibility of making ethical decisions in peace and war.
1947– ) American horrorfiction writer The dominant position Stephen King holds in modern horror is unparalleled, and he has at least indirectly influenced the vast majority of writers working in the genre. He has mixed science fiction, ...
But as you read these titles your eyes kept straying to the shelves at the back of the shop. For on those shelves glowing patches of color, ... The Spider, masked and desperate, jets blow-torch flame into the eye of a killer robot.
The Johnny Dixon stories, from the award-winning author of The House with a Clock in Its Walls, have been acclaimed for their “believable and likable characters” (The New York Times) and “spine-tingling” supernatural adventure ...