Operation: Survive |
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What will soon be a full series, Operation: Survive is full of action, suspicion, secret codes, and more. It is the ultimate mash-up of romance, comedy, action, horror, and mystery. This could be the big read of the next generation of preteens!
This website is filled with secrets, hidden objects, codes, and more! There are a lot of secrets on this site that you won't find anywhere else. These secrets are hidden in fake advertisements, hidden links, and buttons, and they may help you understand new layers hidden within the story. Happy searching!
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O:S Music |
The Books
- Reign of Darkness
- Rule of the Resputoarians - Forgotten Dreams - The Scythe |
F.A.Q.
Why did you choose to write the book?
It actually started off as a song, Battle of Resputoar, which you can find in the Music tab. The song was based off of a completely different story that I wrote, which took place in a kingdom, in medieval times. Then, I got an assignment for school that was called "Fantasy World." We were supposed to create our own fictional world or realm for a grade. Now, since this is in here, you can probably infer that it was the Realm of Despermaine, like in my book, the Reign of Darkness. I came up with a character named Noah Dentroas, who tags along with his "only remaining friend," John West, their enemies being the Resputoarians. I wrote a little description of each very basic character for my project, and I noticed that we were also supposed to write a story of one conflict that happened between the antagonists and the protagonists. So then I started writing a simple story called Operation: Survive (back then, it wasn't a series; it was the title of that one book). The other people's stories were only one or two paragraphs long. Mine? No. It was the first three pages of the book you hopefully read when you clicked the little button at the top of this page. It was still a simple version, though. It was nothing like the three pages I have there now. The plot was the same, but the rest was very, very different. First of all, the "audience" that I targeted was not the tweens themselves; it was my English Language Arts teacher. So the vocabulary was much more precocious, if you know what I mean. I used words like "requisite" instead of "required," or "desiderata" instead of "true happy place in the mind." After the project was over, (I got 100%, mind you) I thought, why stop there? So I went up to my laptop and started typing. It just kept going from there, until it became the book you may have downloaded. Where'd you get the idea to make all the codes?
Well, I am a fan of the 39 Clues series, so I decided to try to make some codes myself. What'd you think of them? :)
When will you publish it?
I don't know...I'm just a kid, so if I tried to publish it right now, the people I would submit it to might not accept it.
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