Exciting adventures in this easy to read series about two boys and the dangerous dinosaurs they encounter – especially the deadly Tyrannosaurus Rex. Jamie’s dad is opening a dinosaur museum in Dinosaur Cove. Jamie expects to find some fossils but never expects to find any dinosaurs alive. After all, they’ve been extinct for years, haven’t they? Soon Jamie and his new friend Tom find themselves desperate to avoid the deadly creatures. Loads of dinosaur fact boxes support the stories making them a useful mine of information too.
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Jamie and Tom are off for another adventure in Dino World, through their secret smuggler's cave. This time they decide to try crabbing - and they manage to catch a real prehistoric crab! Jamie looks it up in the Fossil Finder, and then the boys settle down to have a really good look at their Dino Crab. But then disaster strikes! A sneaky Velociraptor runs up and grabs the Fossil Finder! The boys have to get it back - if they don't, then in the future scientists might find their computer buried with a dinosaur fossil - and that could mess up the whole of dinosaur science! So the chase is on. But the Velociraptor is fast and cunning and leads the boys into a valley full of geysers spouting hot water! Can they find their way through and get their Fossil Finder back - or is the sneaky Velociraptor just too speedy?
What every dinosaur-mad child has been waiting for - a young fiction series that really knows its Tyrannosaurus from its Triceratops. TheGuardian
Author
About Rex Stone
Rex Stone is the pseudonym used by Working Partners, the creators
of Rainbow Magic and other successful series like Animal Ark.
Illustrator Mike Spoor grew up in Northumberland and it was during holidays to the Lake District with his grandparents that he first found a love for drawing. After attending Art College and working as a landscape architect Mike trained as a teacher. He moved to Australia and spent his time flying all over the country to run ceramics workshops. Now, after swapping ceramics for illustration, Mike is back in England and has illustrated many hundreds of books. He considers himself a craftsman rather than a ‘serious’ artist because he is best at drawing scratchy unfinished humorous ideas.