Author's e-books - fairy tale. Page - 1
Princess Isabeau Marie de Valois, was not what you would call a proper princess. Isabeau is the thirteenth daughter of the King of Brilinia and she is too tall, her hair too dark and too opinionated by far. Cursed to tell the truth and nothing but she has caused eighty-eight suitors to turn tail and run.
Curiosity killed the cat, but what happens when a man is ruled by his dreams and finds himself driven by his curiosity.
Alex was told never to open his Grandfather's wooden box, but after he finds a mysterious book he begins to have a series of vivid dreams that involves a that box. Curiosity gets the best of him and he has to find out what's inside.
A blue balloon gets loose and wanders around through some very short stories that look, superficially, like poems. They are meant mostly for adults, but they should be ok for kids as well. The stories were told to the author by a not-very-powerful god that lives in the trees between the branches and the air in the light before sunset. This particular not-very-powerful god isn't much interested in teaching anybody anything, just telling some very short stories. While the stories certainly aren't traditionally religious, they do contain some traditional religious references and rabbits.
At long last, fans of T.M. Camp's "Assam & Darjeeling" can read the next chapter in the story of everyone's favorite little girl lost, Jee.
(And if you haven't read "Assam & Darjeeling" yet, then be advised: Here there be spoilers.)
At the close of "Assam & Darjeeling" readers were given a brief glimpse of Jee as she approached the Winter Palace. But the path that leads her there is long and twisted, with many other stories to tell along the way. "The Cradle" is the first of these.
Jee is enjoying the new freedom that comes with being an exile from the land of the living. But she soon discovers that freedom has its share of discomforts and dangers. Caught in a torrential downpour, she is taken in by a kindly old couple who, it turns out, have story of their own to tell. And Jee discovers yet again that things in the Underworld are not always what they seem.
"The Cradle" begins a new cycle of stories about a little girl looking for a place that she can, at last, call home.
Princess Isabeau Marie de Valois, was not what you would call a proper princess. Isabeau is the thirteenth daughter of the King of Brilinia and she is too tall, her hair too dark and too opinionated by far. Cursed to tell the truth and nothing but she has caused eighty-eight suitors to turn tail and run.
Curiosity killed the cat, but what happens when a man is ruled by his dreams and finds himself driven by his curiosity.
Alex was told never to open his Grandfather's wooden box, but after he finds a mysterious book he begins to have a series of vivid dreams that involves a that box. Curiosity gets the best of him and he has to find out what's inside.
A blue balloon gets loose and wanders around through some very short stories that look, superficially, like poems. They are meant mostly for adults, but they should be ok for kids as well. The stories were told to the author by a not-very-powerful god that lives in the trees between the branches and the air in the light before sunset. This particular not-very-powerful god isn't much interested in teaching anybody anything, just telling some very short stories. While the stories certainly aren't traditionally religious, they do contain some traditional religious references and rabbits.
At long last, fans of T.M. Camp's "Assam & Darjeeling" can read the next chapter in the story of everyone's favorite little girl lost, Jee.
(And if you haven't read "Assam & Darjeeling" yet, then be advised: Here there be spoilers.)
At the close of "Assam & Darjeeling" readers were given a brief glimpse of Jee as she approached the Winter Palace. But the path that leads her there is long and twisted, with many other stories to tell along the way. "The Cradle" is the first of these.
Jee is enjoying the new freedom that comes with being an exile from the land of the living. But she soon discovers that freedom has its share of discomforts and dangers. Caught in a torrential downpour, she is taken in by a kindly old couple who, it turns out, have story of their own to tell. And Jee discovers yet again that things in the Underworld are not always what they seem.
"The Cradle" begins a new cycle of stories about a little girl looking for a place that she can, at last, call home.