Ratings1
Average rating3
New Fantasy Adventure Book for Kids 7-12 Years. The Adventures of the Teen Archaeologists: The Land of the Moepek is a fantasy tale full of dangers and adventure. Three teenagers Billy who is seventeen, Thomas who is sixteen and Rebecca who is fifteen are from Britain and are the children of archaeologists. During a family vacation to Africa they meet Samirah and her two best friends Adam and Atikah. The six teenagers travel through the Pyramid of the Moepek and find their way to the underground city of the Moepek civilization using an ancient map. They not only encounter wild animals, dinosaurs, warriors, and assassins, but also realize they they are prisoners in the strange underground world. There is Naeduur who is the head warrior in charge of protecting the king and his royal family. Naeduur is furious at the six teens for entering into the Land of the Moepek. Naeduur would like nothing more than to destroy the teenagers. There is also Isabella. She is very powerful and can perform all kinds of magic. She will stop at nothing to destroy her enemies and those that get in her way. The Land of the Moepek is full of traitors and plots to destroy the entire royal family. Princess Assuenta with the help of the Teen Archaeologists must work to stop the assassination of her father the king and the destruction of her entire family. Not even her parents believe their daughter the princess. Princess Assuenta must find a way to make them believe or her father will die. The people of the Moepek are an extremely wealthy civilization with riches beyond the teens' imaginations. But all their wealth means nothing if they can't survive the gigantic flying dinosaurs and the gigantic gorilla creature that threatens them.
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I have no idea how to even rate something like this. I would never have read it not for the 372 Pages We'll Never Get Back podcast. First and foremost, it's terrible. Absolutely terrible. But it's so thoroughly terrible in such a naive way that it ends up being sort of charming, in the same way that something like The Eye of Argon is charming. So, 1 star for the book's actual merits, and five for how hard I laughed reading it, averaged to three.