"Appleton, Victor - Tom Swift Jr 23 - And His Aquatomic Tracker" - читать интересную книгу автора (Appleton Victor)

TOM SWIFT AND HIS AQUATOMIC TRACKER
BY VICTOR APPLETON II
No. 23 in the Tom Swift Jr. series.

The Tom Swift Jr. series:
1 Tom Swift and his Flying Lab (1954)
2 Tom Swift and his Jetmarine (1954)
3 Tom Swift and his Rocket Ship (1954)
4 Tom Swift and his Giant Robot (1954)
5 Tom Swift and his Atomic Earth Blaster (1954)
6 Tom Swift and his Outpost in Space (1955)
7 Tom Swift and his Diving Seacopter (1956)
8 Tom Swift in the Caves of Nuclear Fire (1956)
9 Tom Swift on the Phantom Satellite (1956)
10 Tom Swift and his Ultrasonic Cycloplane (1957)
11 Tom Swift and his Deep-Sea Hydrodome (1958)
12 Tom Swift in the Race to the Moon (1958)
13 Tom Swift and his Space Solartron (1958)
14 Tom Swift and his Electronic Retroscope (1959)
15 Tom Swift and his Spectromarine Selector (1960)
16 Tom Swift and the Cosmic Astronauts (1960)
17 Tom Swift and the Visitor from Planet X (1961)
18 Tom Swift and the Electronic Hydrolung (1961)
19 Tom Swift and his Triphibian Atomicar (1962)
20 Tom Swift and his Megascope Space Prober (1962)
21 Tom Swift and the Asteroid Pirates (1963)
22 Tom Swift and his Repelatron Skyway (1963)
23 Tom Swift and his Aquatomic Tracker (1964)
24 Tom Swift and his 3D Telejector (1964)
25 Tom Swift and his Polar-Ray Dynasphere (1965)
26 Tom Swift and his Sonic Boom Trap (1965)
27 Tom Swift and his Subocean Geotron (1966)
28 Tom Swift and the Mystery Comet (1966)
29 Tom Swift and the Captive Planetoid (1967)
30 Tom Swift and his G-Force Inverter (1968)
31 Tom Swift and his Dyna-4 Capsule (1969)
32 Tom Swift and his Cosmotron Express (1970)
33 Tom Swift and the Galaxy Ghosts (1971)

From the front page:
Tom Swift and his pal Bud Barclay embark on one of the greatest scientific
adventures of the century-a daring underwater crossing of the Atlantic Ocean,
equipped only with Tom's electronic hydrolung suitsl Hundreds of miles from
land, the hydrolung batteries inexplicably go dead and the two boys are
dramatically rescued in the dark of night. Examination of their equipment reveals
sabotage.
A complex clue leads Tom to believe there is a connection between the
sabotaging of the hydrolung and the sinking of the S.S. Centurion-which went
down in mid-Atlantic with a fortune in gold bullion and a world-famous statue
aboard. After making good on their second attempt to accomplish the nonstop