Dogs in the Dead of Night
by Mary Pope Osborne
Merlin Missions (18), Magic Tree House (Merlin Missions — Merlin Missions 18)
On This Page
Description
Jack and Annie travel to a monastery in the Swiss Alps where, with the help of St. Bernard dogs and magic, they seek the second of four special objects necessary to break the spell on the wizard Merlin's beloved penguin, Penny.Tags
Recommendations
Member Reviews
Jack and Annie have had several adventures through their magic treehouse. In this transitional chapter book, Annie and Jack try to survive the bitter cold in the French Alps. Jack and Annie travel back in time to retrieve a flower important to Teddy and Kathleen. This installment in The Magic Treehouse series teaches kids that having fun is important but so is following your duties. This is a fun and exciting story for kids just delving into the wonderful world of chapter books; it even teaches them how to take effective notes on stories. Jack and Annie are always nice to each other, even when everything seems to go wrong which shows that a positive attitude can help in any situation. Recommended for ages 7+
Jack and Annie must go on another Merlin Mission. Penny, the abandoned penguin which they saved on a previous mission and gave to Merlin as a present, has accidentally been turned into a stone statue by their young sorcerer friend Teddy, and they need to find four things to break the spell. They have just returned from finding the first one, an emerald rose from Mogul India. Now they must find a white and yellow flower and live its meaning for an hour. But the Magic Tree House takes them to the Swiss Alps around 1800 in the middle of winter. It’s freezing cold outside, and the ground is covered with snow. How will they find a flower in those conditions? And what will happen when they are caught in an avalanche?
There is a lot of show more interesting information woven into this story. Budding botanists will be pleased to know that Laurent Murith, abbot at the Monastery of St. Bernard in 1800, was a great naturalist who collected many specimens of flowers for the monastery library. Students of history will enjoy travelling with First Consul Napoleon Bonaparte from France through the Alps to Italy with 60,000 soldiers in 1800. And, of course, dog lovers will delight in getting to know the first Barry, the St. Bernard dog who saved more than forty lives between 1800 and 1812. The only somewhat negative note is that Jack and Annie use a lot of common euphemisms, such as “gee” and “heck.” Our boys long ago outgrew the reading level of these books, but my wife has continued to purchase each one as it comes out because she likes to read them. And I guess that I do too. show less
There is a lot of show more interesting information woven into this story. Budding botanists will be pleased to know that Laurent Murith, abbot at the Monastery of St. Bernard in 1800, was a great naturalist who collected many specimens of flowers for the monastery library. Students of history will enjoy travelling with First Consul Napoleon Bonaparte from France through the Alps to Italy with 60,000 soldiers in 1800. And, of course, dog lovers will delight in getting to know the first Barry, the St. Bernard dog who saved more than forty lives between 1800 and 1812. The only somewhat negative note is that Jack and Annie use a lot of common euphemisms, such as “gee” and “heck.” Our boys long ago outgrew the reading level of these books, but my wife has continued to purchase each one as it comes out because she likes to read them. And I guess that I do too. show less
I liked the book. I collect books on dogs and this has enough on the dog aspect it made me happy. It was a fun children's book, with some history thrown in.
I liked the book. I collect books on dogs and this has enough on the dog aspect it made me happy. It was a fun children's book, with some history thrown in.
Ok, not gonna lie. This one threw me for a loop. When I learned that French soldiers were involved, I totally thought the flower was going to be a fleur de lis. I think this is the first time the series has successfully tricked me!!!
30303980
Members
- Recently Added By
Lists
Saint Bernard dogs -- children's/young adult fiction
39 works; 1 member
SYES Library Wishlist
1,080 works; 4 members
AR Level 3 in cloudLibrary
316 works; 1 member
Author Information

480+ Works 368,966 Members
Mary Pope Osborne was born in Fort Sill, Oklahoma on May 20, 1949. She grew up in a military family, and by the time she was 15 she had lived in Oklahoma, Austria, Florida, and four different army posts in Virginia and North Carolina. She attended the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill where she majored in religion. After graduation, she show more traveled around Europe and Asia. Before becoming an author, she worked as a window dresser, a medical assistant, a Russian travel consultant, a waitress, an acting teacher, a bartender, and an assistant editor for a children's magazine. Her first book, Run, Run as Fast as You Can, was published in 1982. She is the author of the Magic Tree House series and the Merlin Missions series. Her husband, actor Will Osborne, helps her write the nonfiction companion series, Magic Tree House Research Guides. Her other books include The Deadly Power of Medusa, Jason and the Argonauts, Haunted Waters, and Moonhorse. (Bowker Author Biography) show less
All Editions
Awards and Honors
Awards
Series
Work Relationships
Is contained in
Has as a reference guide/companion
Common Knowledge
- Canonical title
- Dogs in the Dead of Night
- Original title
- Dogs in the Dead of Night
- Alternate titles
- Magic Tree House #46: Dogs in the Dead of Night
- Original publication date
- 2011-08-09
- People/Characters
- Jack of the Magic Tree House; Annie of the Magic Tree House
Classifications
Statistics
- Members
- 2,089
- Popularity
- 9,759
- Reviews
- 8
- Rating
- (3.87)
- Languages
- 7 — Chinese, English, French, German, Japanese, Korean, Spanish
- Media
- Paper, Audiobook, Ebook
- ISBNs
- 26
- ASINs
- 11























































