In this fast-paced middle-grade adventure novel, explore worlds where the power of healing is intertwined with the stars and ancient Greek mythology. Will our two heroes be able to battle back against childhood asthma?
As their grandfather's health declines, Luka and Soleil are trusted with a big secret.
There is a world beyond Core. The fable of the hidden coin is more than just a story. And Luka and Soleil are the last two remaining descendants of the God of Healing . . . and the last hope for Earth's ill and injured children.
The siblings are strong together, but they're up against big enemies. Hades, determined to prevent the healing powers of Asclepius and welcome more souls into his underworld, unleashes his demonic minions: the Nosoi.
As they begin wreaking havoc, the world's health only gets worse.
Luka and Soleil's only hope is to find a mystical coin that hides a star from Ophiuchus, the healing constellation. Facing dwindling oxygen supplies and demon-induced pollution, will they defy the odds to reach the Medicine Stars in time?
While our heroes fight, humanity can only hold its breath and hope.
This captivating asthma book for kids was written by a longtime pediatric emergency room physician, Dr. Mark Schnellinger, and allows readers to . . .
- discover real-life medical metaphors of the trachea, lungs, inhalers, nebulizers, and more,
- transform the realities of childhood asthma into something understandable and empowering, and
- explore the fascinating world of the biological human body in the approachable format of a thrilling middle-grade adventure story.
Fans of Poseidon's Academy and the Deadly Disease: A Middle-Grade Fantasy Series will love the fast-paced adventure within this Greek mythology middle-grade novel.
Will Luka and Soleil rise to the occasion, harness the power of healing, and save the ill children on Earth?
Dive into this captivating tale as hope and healing collide in an epic battle of life . . . and breath.
Dr. Mark Schnellinger is a writer and longtime pediatric emergency medicine physician. He was educated at Maimonides Medical Center and completed a fellowship in pediatric emergency medicine at the University of Minnesota. He currently works at Children's Minnesota.
During his time in the pediatric emergency room, Dr. Schnellinger noticed that many children and their caregivers were often scared and vulnerable as they dealt with the realities of illness and injury. He wondered if there was a way he could help children and their caregivers understand what was going on inside their body in an engaging and fun way.
The Medicine Stars became his answer to this common struggle—a series of books that teach middle-grade children about illness and injury, not through shots and doctor's visits, but rather through captivating adventures that use real-life medical metaphors.