Super Spies (Disney/Pixar Cars 2)


Book Description

All the world's a racetrack as superstar Lightning McQueen zooms back into action, with his best friend Mater in tow, to take on the globe's fastest and finest in Disney/Pixar Cars 2. This Step 2 film retelling is sure to be a hit with children ages 4 to 6. Step 2 readers use basic vocabulary and short sentences to tell simple stories. For children who recognize familiar words and can sound out new words with help.




Super Secret Super Spies: Mystery of the All-Seeing Eye


Book Description

Perfect for readers of Stuart Gibbs’s Spy School series, this is the first book in an epic series filled with gadgets, secret codes, and clandestine adventures from debut author Max Mason! Are you ready to enter the world of a super secret super spy? Maddie Robinson has always been overlooked: by her parents (who disappeared), by her friends (who are nonexistent), and even science fair judges (who think she has “so much . . . potential”). So when a mysterious man called The Recruiter invites her to join a secret society of spies, Maddie is floored. Then she discovers that these super secret super spies are the Illuminati—the world’s most covert organization rumored to control, well, everything. And one more thing: The Illuminati are kids, like Maddie! Together, they must protect humanity from anyone who threatens its peace, and basically keeping the planet spinning on its axis. No biggie, right?




Super Spies


Book Description

Agent Secret and Miss T try to outsmart the Lady in Pink and Henchman Tyrone as they search for three valuable containers.




Super Spies


Book Description

Children learn about the s-blends in this easy to read book about Dora and her friends. In this story Dora and her friend Isa are super spies, trying to stop Swiper from stealing their snacks.




The Super Spies


Book Description

The average spy during the post WW II era never saw the enemy. An informant could be a physicist, a chemist, an engineer, a professor of languages, a counterfeiter, an electronics expert, a communications technician, an airplane pilot, a soldier, a sailor, a cryptologist, a translator of Sanskrit. There were jobs in the intelligence community for farmers and chefs, fingerprint experts and cloth weavers, photographers and television directors, makeup artists and female impersonators. In the United States of the late sixties, there were more spies than there were diplomats in the State Department or employees of the Department of Labor. Was the employment of some sixty thousand individuals of various espionage agencies an extravagance? Or was the information gathered about enemies and friends a necessity in a dangerous and still volatile world? At the time of publication of Andrew Tully's The Super Spies, America's super spy agencies had been known only to the highest government officials, and Tully was the first investigative journalist to penetrate the inner sanctum of American espionage and reveal the inside story of spy organizations more powerful and more secret than the CIA. Certainly the most formidable of all was the National Security Agency (NSA), whose specialty was electronic spying and cryptography. Though its deadly serious operations girdled the globe, NSA headquarters at Fort Meade, Maryland, resembled, at first glance, a retirement village: eight snack bars, a hospital complete with an operating room, a bank and a dry-cleaning shop. However, beyond this facade an army of anonymous government employees received, sifted and analyzed secret information gathered by electronically equipped spy planes, ships, and satellites. Using their signals and messages NSA experts were able to pinpoint the locations of missile bases, hear conversations between top officials in Moscow and other Communist capitals, and determine the morale of Soviet fighter pilots. Andrew Tully revealed, too, the hidden operations of other highly secret American spy organizations: DIA, a super-secret branch of the Defense Department; INR, an arm of the State Department; and the intelligence branches of the Army, Navy and Air Force. The intelligence community had never been one happy family. The average intelligence expert was an individual of strong conviction, high talent and temperament and believed that his agency could complete an assignment better than a competing agency, and never mind a lot of folderol about rules and regulations. Some imprudent things were done and more imprudent things were said, but the gigantic spying machine did work. Although information was often duplicated and toes trod, together intelligence agencies provided information that influenced presidents, cemented decisions, and molded history. The question the tax-paying American public had a right to ask was whether intelligence gathering agencies might not work just as well if cut down to a more manageable and less duplicative size. In The Super Spies, Andrew Tully shrewdly examined the balance sheets and, in conclusion, urged the Congress to do the same. Although the names and dates have changed, Tully's disclosures are as applicable today as they were 60 years ago. Fascinating and readable, The Super Spies was, and is, a ground-breaking book.




Totally Spies #1: The O.P.


Book Description

During a weekend road trip up the California coast, the girls' new car (a totally tricked-out, gadget-filled gift from Jerry to celebrate their newfound super-spydom) breaks down in a seemingly idyllic gated coastal town called Ocean Palisades – or "The O.P." for short. Until they meet the teens who seem too perfect to be true... Ages 6 to 11.




Scooby-Doo in Super Spies


Book Description

Scooby and Shaggy are playing spies. They decide to spy on Daphne and discover that she is missing! It's up to the two super spies to solve the case and find Daphne.




Super-Secret Spies


Book Description

Jack and Jason Stevenson, two twin brothers, think they are ordinary eleven-year-old boys. They fool around in the front yard on Christmas Eve, and that very midnight, from their window, they see two men take a camera from a stop sign in front of the yard. They figure the camera mustve caught them fooling around, so they set off after the men, only to discover their long-lost father being alive, and that theyre Super-Secret Spies! Jack and Jason defeat Sensor Sender, the worlds most evil villain, but theyre too young to realise that theres more to fight . . . Follow Jack and Jason for seven Christmas Eves to fight the most horrible, awful things you can possibly imagine. But remember this, if you want to go, you have to be prepared to fight evil villains, bad fat dudes, murderers, mean jail keepers, grizzly bears, shake hands with ghosts, and much more . . .




Superspies


Book Description

Anyone who has ever participated in a demonstration, gone to a rally, or even written a term paper on a subject remotely “un-American,” you may have been watched. Whether they’ve helped organize a union or engaged in anti-labor activities, there is a chance that your phone may be tapped or your mail opened. There may be a file about you at the FBI. Currently, a very delicate balance exists between surveillance in the name of national security and spying. An upset in this balance can result in a threat to civil liberties. The growth of huge bureaucracies of superspies on the federal, state, and local levels has tipped this balance to jeopardize the right to privacy. The CIA, the FBI, virtually every government agency, and numerous corporations have stretched “spying in the public interest” to its limits. Foreign governments are toppled, assassinations are plotted. The consequences of political dissent are enormous.




Spy Kids Adventures #7 #7: Superstar Spies


Book Description

Carmen and Juni are assigned guard duty for a famous pop star The pop star's talents are the result of a powerful gem that has now fallen into the hands of an evil villainess. The Spy Kids must save the star!