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Ellen Theodora Madigan sees past events in her dreams and has the smarts to solve the mysteries they hint at. At age fifteen, she moves to Rangeley, Maine after spending much of her life living near her dad's archaeological dig sites in other countries. She and her family spend her dad's sabbatical year at her grandparents' lake house. She befriends a loner girl at school, starts having dreams about the first inhabitants of the area, Abenaki Native Americans, and keeps encountering loons that she feels are trying to communicate. With the help of her first boyfriend, she solves the three…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Ellen Theodora Madigan sees past events in her dreams and has the smarts to solve the mysteries they hint at. At age fifteen, she moves to Rangeley, Maine after spending much of her life living near her dad's archaeological dig sites in other countries. She and her family spend her dad's sabbatical year at her grandparents' lake house. She befriends a loner girl at school, starts having dreams about the first inhabitants of the area, Abenaki Native Americans, and keeps encountering loons that she feels are trying to communicate. With the help of her first boyfriend, she solves the three mysteries: Why is the girl so alone? What are the dreams and the loons telling her? and Why did the Abenaki leave?
Autorenporträt
Joan Wright Mularz was born into a large family on an island in the middle of New York Harbor. It's where she read her first mystery and learned to love reading, writing and drawing. Since then, she has lived in three countries and has traveled to five continents. Her experiences as a traveler, parent and a teacher, made her want to write for young people. She loves learning languages and exploring new places but she and her husband love having New England as a home base. More than 30 years ago, they were drawn to the beauty of the Rangeley Lakes region of Maine and built a home there with their own labor and the help of family and friends. The fact that the area is dotted with Abenaki place names, but few if any Abenaki residents, gave Joan the germ of an idea for the third E.T. Madigan Mystery-MAINE ROOTS RUN DEEP. Joan has also written short stories, curriculums and educational grants.