The latest set of Magic Tree House audiobooks have been on loop in the car, so I can now report that I've listened to:
Dolphins at Daybreak (Magic Tree House, #9): A suspiciously unattended submarine breaks down and our intrepid heroes are rescued by dolphins! A fun one.
Ghost Town at Sundown (Magic Tree House, #10): There are mustangs to rescue and a really stereotypical cowboy with a heart of gold. That's really all you need to know.
Lions at Lunchtime (Magic Tree House, #11): I don't know, I like the nature-focused ones less than the ones with people. I think there might have been an African tribe in this one, but I kept hearing the part with the hyenas.
Polar Bears Past Bedtime (Magic Tree House, #12): I only heard this one once, but I know Jack and Annie were on thin ice, with polar bear cubs. It felt a little like Eve of the Emperor Penguin to me, except I know she wrote this one first; I liked Penguin better so I guess she improved on the concept. (Yes, I know Arctic is different from Antarctic.)
Dolphins at Daybreak (Magic Tree House, #9): A suspiciously unattended submarine breaks down and our intrepid heroes are rescued by dolphins! A fun one.
Ghost Town at Sundown (Magic Tree House, #10): There are mustangs to rescue and a really stereotypical cowboy with a heart of gold. That's really all you need to know.
Lions at Lunchtime (Magic Tree House, #11): I don't know, I like the nature-focused ones less than the ones with people. I think there might have been an African tribe in this one, but I kept hearing the part with the hyenas.
Polar Bears Past Bedtime (Magic Tree House, #12): I only heard this one once, but I know Jack and Annie were on thin ice, with polar bear cubs. It felt a little like Eve of the Emperor Penguin to me, except I know she wrote this one first; I liked Penguin better so I guess she improved on the concept. (Yes, I know Arctic is different from Antarctic.)