Project Gemini: Mission 2: Okinawa (The Mission League)
Author | : | |
Rating | : | 4.20 (584 Votes) |
Asin | : | B073Q88RPJ |
Format Type | : | |
Number of Pages | : | 185 Pages |
Publish Date | : | 2013-06-04 |
Language | : | English |
DESCRIPTION:
But there's little time for R & R as Spencer must attend school, volunteer at a local martial arts training facility, and track and report a mysterious girl named Keiko. All he really wants to do is protect Keiko from her ex-boyfriend and stay out of trouble, but where Spencer Garmond is concerned, trouble is never far away.. After an exhausting school year, Spencer is thrilled to discover that the summer training mission will take him and his fellow agents-in-training to Okinawa, a tropical paradise. Spencer thinks he knows exactly what to do, but the more he discovers about Keiko, the more questions he has
A Story Teens Can Relate To Becky Project Gemini, a young adult novel in the Mission League series by Jill Williamson, is a mildly speculative Christian novel most suited for young teens.The Story. Spencer Garmond, AKA Jonas Wright, is a promising basketball player. He’s also been recruited into the development program of the Mission League, a secret branch of INTERPOL, which aims to collect and analyze intelligence regardin. Didn't Want to Put it Down! What a joy it was to get my hands on the next book in The Mission League Series. Can I just say that I love Spencer? Constantly throughout this novel, I found my eyes on the bottom of my kindle, hoping that the novel was not almost over yet. I think that Ms. Williamson does a fabulous job writing the voice of a teen boy. Spencer is so well-developed that it seems he can step through the pages. Tho. Bringing the Family Together I enjoy the fact we can read this as a family with a 12-year-old son and 18-year-old daughter. It's hard to find things that we can enjoy together with that kind of age range, but this book and the first in the series have kept all of our attention. It's been nice to have something to do that isn't electronics going our separate ways. Kudos!