Piet PrinsWhen they are invited to spend a few weeks with Uncle Arnie at the seashore, little do Tom, Carl, and Bert realize that they will be staying in the hunting lodge of a medieval castle. Uncle Arnie is quite a storyteller. Soon the boys find their imaginations and the lodge peopled with ghosts from Rodensteyn Castle, a castle long ago buried under the sand. But do ghosts leave tracks, tracks that Scout follows into the sea?
Are the legends of the ghost of Sir Isobald and the treasure of Rodensteyn Castle true? Is it a ghost that Tom spots in the dunes at night? Can Scout’s nose, no matter how keen, help the boys solve a mystery over 400 years old?
Past and Present, fact and fiction merge as Tom and his friends search for a treasure that has outlasted the ages.
[Softcover, 132 pages]
About the Author: Pieter Jongeling
Mr. Jongeling was born in the northern part of
The Netherlands and studied to become a teacher. He indeed did teach for some years, but soon became the
international correspondent of a Dutch newspaper. In 1942 he was arrested by the Germans and sent to a
concentration camp. After the allied victory in 1945 he returned to The Netherlands and became one of the most
important journalists and politicians in The Netherlands. For many years he was the editor of a Reformed
Christian daily newspaper, in which he wrote most of his children's books as serials under the name Piet Prins.
The first thing many people read when the newspaper arrived was these serials. In 1963 Mr. Jongeling became
member of the Dutch parliament for the Reformed Political Alliance. One commentator mused: "What makes
Jongeling such a remarkable parliamentarian? That's simple. The man works like a horse! He is always fully
informed. When Jongeling speaks, the house listens."
Both as a journalist and a statesman, Pieter
Jongeling knew himself bound by the inspired Word of God and as such his labour has born much
fruit.