Author's e-books - mythology. Page - 1
All the research and footwork has finally paid off. Daniel Smith and Peter McCabe are getting close to finding the Patron Elf of the Holy Seven—as they need her help to find an end to Eve McAllister’s vimp curse. Both are in England, Peter going back and forth between London and Oxford in his research while Daniel is in Stratford-Upon-Avon making negotiations with another elf friend. The problem is that a local coven of witches may have set their sights on her, and are meddling in the Elf's affairs. And this particular elf is not one any person should mess with... for some elves were worshipped as gods in ancient days, and this one may have been the Eye of Ra with the powerful destrutive gift of blazing hot fire.
Moving to the town of Black Vale with her unacquainted father had appeared as the ultimate loophole for Iris Blake after the tragic death of her mother. She indubitably was an escapist by nature and was perpetually running from the stark reality that she would soon have to face- a fate doomed to be ineluctable and origins that would most likely ruin her.
From a downright peculiar attraction to new people, only one truth was conspicuous-this town was crammed with secrets and she would not be spared...
Want some dinner? I got something for you. Your heart. On a stick. Now do you want that roasted or fried?
Born ignorant of his heritage, Rain Lewis lives an ordinary life for a troubled teenager. With anger management and severe abandonment issues, he's a rebel in every aspect imaginable. As his desperate aunt finally manages to convince him to go to a psychiatrist, he imagines it will be a simple and pointless endeavor. What he didn't know however, was that in that small room with the stainless white walls and bullshit questions
and lies, he would find his destiny.
Arya doesn't know who she is -and it's not the
self-discovery type of thing, either. With no last name to tag along with and no identity, she's been bounced from foster home to foster home -each with disastrous results. What would you do if the living nightmares that people read about and classified as myths were your only company?
You get a heaping pile of shit in your life.
Bon apetite.
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.
All the research and footwork has finally paid off. Daniel Smith and Peter McCabe are getting close to finding the Patron Elf of the Holy Seven—as they need her help to find an end to Eve McAllister’s vimp curse. Both are in England, Peter going back and forth between London and Oxford in his research while Daniel is in Stratford-Upon-Avon making negotiations with another elf friend. The problem is that a local coven of witches may have set their sights on her, and are meddling in the Elf's affairs. And this particular elf is not one any person should mess with... for some elves were worshipped as gods in ancient days, and this one may have been the Eye of Ra with the powerful destrutive gift of blazing hot fire.
Moving to the town of Black Vale with her unacquainted father had appeared as the ultimate loophole for Iris Blake after the tragic death of her mother. She indubitably was an escapist by nature and was perpetually running from the stark reality that she would soon have to face- a fate doomed to be ineluctable and origins that would most likely ruin her.
From a downright peculiar attraction to new people, only one truth was conspicuous-this town was crammed with secrets and she would not be spared...
Want some dinner? I got something for you. Your heart. On a stick. Now do you want that roasted or fried?
Born ignorant of his heritage, Rain Lewis lives an ordinary life for a troubled teenager. With anger management and severe abandonment issues, he's a rebel in every aspect imaginable. As his desperate aunt finally manages to convince him to go to a psychiatrist, he imagines it will be a simple and pointless endeavor. What he didn't know however, was that in that small room with the stainless white walls and bullshit questions
and lies, he would find his destiny.
Arya doesn't know who she is -and it's not the
self-discovery type of thing, either. With no last name to tag along with and no identity, she's been bounced from foster home to foster home -each with disastrous results. What would you do if the living nightmares that people read about and classified as myths were your only company?
You get a heaping pile of shit in your life.
Bon apetite.
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.