Kindle Novels for Android



Open Ground: After bullies harass William, he moves to Wyoming to live with his father. Open Ground explores the drama of human relationships through a boy's struggle to maintain family.

Later that summer, his father is falsely accused of a crime and jailed. William mountain-bikes across Wyoming to stay with his aunt -- applying the knowledge his father had imparted -- defying the perils of nature.

Topics in this middle school novel relate to math, science and technology with social themes applicable to grades 5 and 6 core curriculum. Free E-Learning kernels, available at Site3e.Com, are effective self-contained units. Forsaken Rock, a Kindle novel available at SmithLiterary.Com is applicable to grades 7 and 8 studies.(Kindle $0.99 at Amazon.Com.



Forsaken Rock: NASA Leadership decide to send criminals to their Mars colony for long-term incarceration. Rather than allow their world to be corrupted, settlers on the planet break ties with Earth to become an independent world. Mirrid Wolf inadvertently kills a young security man to protect her child.

Eleven years later, the people of Earth invite Marian colonists to the Olympic Games. Mirrid oversees the Marian Team as recently elected Chief Council of the Red Planet. Toemoe Sol, head of Sol Corporation, contracts an assassin to disrupt the competition by shooting Mirrid's daughter, Daara. Marians are then blamed for a terrorist attack that kills over 300 spectators. Conflicts challenge Mirrid's untried leadership. (Kindle $2.99 at Amazon.Com.


Indivisible: The United States' economy has tumbled after two decades of fighting terrorism worldwide. An Army helicopter lands on a remote New Hampshire mountain. Troops witness an unbearable sight: sixty Cub Scouts slain by an unmanned automatic weapon intended to catch smugglers. The President orders the soldiers to depart immediately -- and maintain absolute secrecy. Cover-up of the Dixville massacre begins. The brutality to New Hampshire's children ignites national support for a rebellion to instate government reform. (Kindle $2.99 at Amazon.Com.


Alienable Rights: This novel champions the American family through the main character Traften Brown. He flees Boston with his baby after a confrontation with a gang leader. Traften finds a place in Vermont as a member of the Island Pond Covenant, a local organization formed to supply the community with food and medicine. As a former electrical engineering student at MIT, Traften designs a communication system for the Vermont group. They accept him in the community as their own. Leaving his daughter with a family in Island Pond, Traften returns to Boston and rescues Ruth. While in Boston, he rediscovers his heritage. A descendant of William Carney, a Congressional Medal of Honor recipient, Traften carries the medallion throughout the conflict. The heirloom haunts him, a reminder of forebears who had fought for him. Rather than abandon the city for an easier life in the North Country, he stays to confront his enemy. (Kindle $2.99 at Amazon.Com.


Blair Smith was born at home in the heart of Amish country in Holmes County, Ohio. He graduated from Ohio Northern University majoring in Technology and Education, later obtaining a Masters in Technology Education from the University of Vermont. A writer for ten years, the author has completed six novels that range from Science Fiction, to Thrillers, to a Middle School Reader.


NEWS 3E

Monday, January 4

Chapter 9a -- Android & iPhone Books


- Chaos' company traveled in groups of about fifty each, on different routes toward the coast of Maine. Point teams with cash in-hand forged ahead to secure trucks and vans for transport in Portland. The groups communicated only with the laser transmitters, devices the technician had managed to rig on riflescopes. Point troopers for each company would laser information back to the headgear of someone in each group, but the communicator only worked if there was direct line-of-sight. Maine's flatlands made it difficult to get enough elevation to scope-in the receiver and speak to them. Snowmachines blazed a trail as the rest of the expedition used cross-country skis.

They weren't the redneck dolts Helen thought them to be. Many of them were from the North Country. They ranged in age from seventeen to thirty. A surprising number were from the Midwest. She recognized three young men from Colebrook. They greeted her by name. When they spoke to Helen, or even Steve, they used Ma'am or Sir. They were a disciplined lot who appeared to be in good condition, skiing thirty miles the first day proved that.

Point teams prepared camp and collected firewood; cloud cover allowed them to have a fire that night. When Helen's group arrived in the valley, a warm yellow glow seeped through the trees ahead. A spot had been cleared in the snow for Helen's tent. One of the young men detached a tent and flung it into the air where it instantly uncoiled into a five-man tent, her quarters for the night. Steve Morrison had to bunk up with four rebels; he was expected to endure the austere conditions the fighting men did.

After dinner, everyone sat around the many campfires and chatted or listened to CB radio skip. Most listened to channel 6, The Wizard's station. Tonight, their guest host was 606 from South Carolina, a prerecorded broadcast.

Steve Morrison sat beside Helen at a fire. The reporter still brooded over the incident at Helen's house. "This must be the most idiotic thing I've ever done in my career--what's left of a career--if I survive this. Hell, we could be jumped by Army Rangers right now and shot." Helen gave him a perturbed glance. "What?" Steve didn't understand. "I know you people lost a lot in the Dixville Massacre, but going up against the government is pointless. You must realize you can't win."

"I guess it doesn't matter anymore. When my son's life was taken, so was mine." Helen turned and looked squarely at the reporter, "Have you ever loved someone so deeply? No parent should ever outlive their child."

"Well, I don't know--"

"No. You don't know. If you knew, you wouldn't be sitting here whining. What happens to me doesn't matter. The Feds did more than murdered sixty-four kids; they crushed our dreams. They took our children. They violated our homes." Helen shook her head, "And we're pissed. We are so pissed! There's your story, reporter. Write it down." Helen reached into her coat pocket and pulled out a electronic notepad, "Here. Use this."

Steve took it from her and began scribbling down the words, then stopped. He looked up like a scolded puppy. "I don't need to write it down. I'll remember."

Mr Smith
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Middle School E-Learning
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