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It is a caper story about the retrieval of a valuable baseball card. The book was the first of a series, followed by Zoobreak, Framed!, Showoff, Hideout, Jackpot, Unleashed, and Jingle. [2] The book's cover signifies the plot's main thread about baseball cards, and features the characters running around a Baseball diamond.
The Baseball Card Adventures is a novel series written by Dan Gutman. [1] There are 12 books in the series, published by HarperCollins between 1997 and 2015. The books feature a boy, Joe Stoshack, who can travel through time when he touches old baseball cards . [ 2 ]
Unlike most every other sports book, and specifically those covering baseball players of the 1950s and early 1960s, The Great American Baseball Card Flipping, Trading and Bubble Gum Book does not focus on the stars and legends of the game but rather on the lesser and forgotten players. Probably more than anything else this is what defines the ...
A trading card (or collectible card) is a small card, usually made out of paperboard or thick paper, which usually contains an image of a certain person, place or thing (fictional or real) and a short description of the picture, along with other text (attacks, statistics, or trivia). [1]
The Report Card is a children's novel by Andrew Clements, [1] first published in 2004. The story is narrated by a 5th-grade girl, Nora Rose Rowley. Nora is secretly a genius but does not tell anyone for fear that she will be thought of as "different".
The contents of the book report, for a work of fiction, typically include basic bibliographical information about the work, a summary of the narrative and setting, main elements of the stories of key characters, the author's purpose in creating the work, the student's opinion of the book, and a theme statement summing up the main idea drawn ...
Xiaolin Showdown Trading Card Game [246] 2005: Wizards of the Coast: No XXXenophile: 1996: Slag-Blah Entertainment/Studio Foglio: No Young Jedi Collectible Card Game [247] 1999: Decipher, Inc. No Yu-Gi-Oh! Trading Card Game: 1999: Konami: Yes Yu Yu Hakusho Trading Card Game: 2003: Score Entertainment: No Zatch Bell! The Card Battle [248] 2005 ...
These cards, with black-and-white or color original art, have been randomly inserted into various trading card sets since the 1990s. The first set to name, market and produce pack-inserted sketch cards was the Defective Comics Trading Cards set of 1993 from Active Marketing International, illustrated by Mark Voger.