The Double Cousins and the Mystery of the Torn Map | The Double Cousins Mystery series, Book 2

by Miriam Jones Bradley

Genres: Children & Young Adult, Fiction, Middle Grade

ISBN: 9781935507673

144 pages

Price: $10.99

What a way to end the summer!

Is it possible for the Double Cousins to squeeze in a new adventure before school starts?  The excitement all begins with an e-mail from Slim who has found a clue in an old clock and needs their help to solve this intriguing mystery. Before they know it the Double Cousins are on the road in search of answers.

It’s great fun for Max, Carly, their siblings, and Cousin Brandon to travel through Colorado in the camper with Grandma and Grandpa Johnson. Even better is spending time with their recently discovered cousin Slim.

It’s not all fun and games—or camping, hiking, and roasting marshmallows—however. There’s a real mystery to solve, complete with hundred-year-old clues, family stories handed down, and a few tense and dangerous moments.

Will they succeed in putting together all the pieces?  Are they real detectives, like Max’s hero, Encyclopedia Brown?  Will the pesky thief scare them away?  Or worse yet, will he beat them to the treasure? Come along and find out in The Double Cousins and the Mystery of the Torn Map.

As the cousins pursue their clues, they find that they each have particular strengths and can achieve more together than separately, and they learn  valuable lessons in cooperation, contentment, and confidence.

The Double Cousins and the Mystery of the Torn Map is book two in the Double Cousins Mystery Series.

Book One: The Double Cousins and the Mystery of the Missing Watch

Book Three: The Double Cousins and the Mystery of the Rushmore Treasure

Book Four: The Double Cousins and the Mystery of Custer’s Gold

Book Five: The Double Cousins and the Mystery of the Russian Jewels

About

Miriam Jones Bradley has lived “from sea to shining sea” but spent most of her life in the Great Plains. She and her husband, Dr. Bruce Bradley, now make their home in Newberry, South Carolina.