Medea et Peregrinus Pulcherrimus: Classroom Set of 15 Books

$165.00

Medea dreams that a handsome stranger will soon arrive to Colchis, her home. Her dream, however, lacks critical details. What does this stranger want and how far is he willing to go to achieve it? Is he peaceful or are his 50 companions as dangerous as they seem? As her father King Aeetes ponders these questions, Medea falls desperately in love with the handsome stranger, Jason, and aids him in his quest to capture the Golden Fleece. But is protecting Jason a betrayal of her family and her country? How far will Medea go to protect the people she loves? Where will love ultimately bring Medea?

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Purchase this classroom set of 15 Medea et Peregrinus Pulcherrimus novellas . This discounted bundle of books saves $15 off the list price AND gets free shipping in the United States!

Medea et Peregrinus Pulcherrimus:

Medea dreams that a handsome stranger will soon arrive to Colchis, her home. Her dream, however, lacks critical details. What does this stranger want and how far is he willing to go to achieve it? Is he peaceful or are his 50 companions as dangerous as they seem? As her father King Aeetes ponders these questions, Medea falls desperately in love with the handsome stranger, Jason, and aids him in his quest to capture the Golden Fleece. But is protecting Jason a betrayal of her family and her country? How far will Medea go to protect the people she loves? Where will love ultimately bring Medea?

Medea et Peregrinus Pulcherrimus is over 7,500 words long, and it uses 237 total words to encompass that length.
Of those 237 words, 30 are glossed words that do not appear frequently, 22 are proper nouns like names of people or cities, and 25 additional words are infrequently used clear cognates. Readers, then, need to have a rich, deep understanding of 160 words to read this novella.

This story is intended for use in Latin III or Latin IV in a four-year program in high school. It is also appropriate for extensive reading by these same students, university-level Latin students, or even teachers.

To learn additional information about Medea et Peregrinus Pulcherrimus, follow this link. To read the first chapter, follow this link. For the dictionary of used words, follow this link.

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