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The Dragon of Doom (Moongobble and Me, 1) by Bruce Coville GIANT $1.00 CASSETTE SALE ITEM!! Nothing ever happens in the little town of Pigbone—until Moongobble moves into the abandoned cottage at the top of the hill with his faithful toad, Urk. Young Edward begins working for the would-be magician, and before he knows it is off on his first quest. A rollicking new chapter book filled with wacky characters and weird situations. Click here to read a review of The Dragon of Doom at AudiobookCafe.com! |
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| Product Details:
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Availability: In Stock Ready for Shipping |
| Editions: |
sku |
isbn-13 |
isbn-10 |
count |
| Cassette Standard |
04002 |
978-1-932076-60-8 |
1-932076-60-3 |
One Cass. |
| Library Edition |
04002CDB |
978-1-933322-23-0 |
1-933322-23-3 |
One CD |
| Paperback |
PB-DOOM |
978-0-689857-57-7 |
0-689-85757-8 |
n/a |
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Librarians: click here for a printable product information page
Listen to samples from this audiobook: | Sample 1 | Introduction: Edward and the town of Pigbone (1:18, about 1.2 MB) |  | Sample 2 | Moongobble casts a spell (1:18, about 946 KB) |  | Sample 3 | From forest to dragon (1:46, about 1.6 MB) |
Reviews:| "The fun-filled story is brought to life by a full cast
an excellent job of providing unique voices for each character." | | Chicago Parent | | | | "Rich in dialogue, the story suits its full-cast treatment... Each character is played with gusto by a different person making this more of a performance than a simple reading." | | School Library Journal | | | | "If you’ve listened to more than one audiobook you can understand how important the narration is to the story and the overall presentation... Sparkes narration is so impressive you find yourself listening in awe as he performs line after line, chapter after chapter." | | Audiobook Cafe Aug 2004 Read entire review
| | | | "The story is narrated by young actor Ryan Sparkes, who gives an enthusiastic performance as Edward. His youthful exuberance carries the innocence of a bygone age and may remind older listeners of the sort of boy heroes that populated late-50s and early-60s children’s films, or, say, “Leave It to Beaver.” This energy adds to the Coville’s light-handed humor." | | AudioFile Feb 2005 | | |
Meet the Cast:
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