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"Seventeen-year-old Jet Black is a ninja. There's only one problem-- she doesn't know it. Others do, however, and they're scheming to capture her and uncover her secrets. When her mother dies, Jet knows only that she must go to Japan to protect a family treasure hidden in her ancestral land. She's terrified, but if Jet won't fight to project her world, who will? Stalked by bounty hunters and desperately in love with the man who's been sent to kill her, [she] must be strong enough to protect the treasure, preserve an ancient culture, and save a sacred mountain from destruction"--Back cover.

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Produktbeschreibung
"Seventeen-year-old Jet Black is a ninja. There's only one problem-- she doesn't know it. Others do, however, and they're scheming to capture her and uncover her secrets. When her mother dies, Jet knows only that she must go to Japan to protect a family treasure hidden in her ancestral land. She's terrified, but if Jet won't fight to project her world, who will? Stalked by bounty hunters and desperately in love with the man who's been sent to kill her, [she] must be strong enough to protect the treasure, preserve an ancient culture, and save a sacred mountain from destruction"--Back cover.
Autorenporträt
Award-winning multi-genre writer Leza Lowitz has published more than seventeen books, including the Amazon best-selling title, Yoga Poems. Her numerous awards include the PEN/Oakland Josephine Miles Poetry Award, a PEN Syndicated Fiction Award, grants from the NEA and NEH, and the Japan-U.S. Friendship Commission Prize for the Translation of Japanese Literature from Columbia University. Her writing has appeared in the Huffington Post, Shambhala Sun, Harpers, Best Buddhist Writing, the New York Times online, and on NPR's "The Sound of Writing." Shogo Oketani is a martial artist, editor, translator and author of the critically acclaimed middle grade novel J-Boys: Kazuo's World, Tokyo 1965. Together with Lowitz, he was honored with the Japan-U.S. Friendship Commission Prize for the Translation of Japanese Literature from Columbia University. Lowitz and Oketani live in Japan with their young son.