King Bonfort, ruler of the Twelve Kingdoms, is forced from power by a conspiracy led by a sorcerer and supported by powerful magic, otherworldly allies and traitorous subjects of Bonfort’s own. Can the king protect his people from the evil that would take over their world? . . .
Alaisa is an elven huntress, silent and deadly. Her brother Hilner, on the other hand, is an elven magician, loud and annoying but smart in his own way. When a senator asks the two of them to investigate the Verel family, who have been cursed to lose every one of their firstborn in strange accidents, they cannot refuse. The mystery . . .
This novel follows the lives of three separate characters as they deal with a great societal upheaval. . . .
Hiding from her past and her people was all Celine wanted to do. And she found the best place to hide, as an elf, was in the midst of humans, where her very uniqueness was it’s own anonymity. Until the day a fellow elf, Rathaniel, destroyed her safety and comfort. Her life now tied to his, she follows this man, . . .
Evonalé has never cared for tales of loathsome tyrants, seduced maids, and prophesied saviors. In the world of Aleyi, prophecies always come true. Evonalé herself is supposed to somehow free her grandmother’s enslaved queendom. But she’s merely a child, and her father is the powerful fire mage who subjugates the realm. Evonalé has therefore fled home, her two half-siblings, . . .
An ongoing historical fantasy story set in the north of England in the decades following the Norman Conquest. The story is illustrated with screenshots from The Sims 2, and published chapter-by-chapter on the Web. . . .
They say that coming of age is a difficult time—even for princes. Perhaps especially for princes, Seth thought to himself as he wandered through the market. Here he was, only 16 years old, and his father wanted to talk to him about the choice of a wife! His father had spent time explaining how important it was to secure . . .
A sequel to Island Peoples and Come the Day. Whoever said that Dwarves were taciturn people who only liked to dig rock has never met Heinrich. And he just refused to accept the idea that Dwarves can’t swim. . . .
Sequel to Island Peoples Hadassah was worried about this new husband her father had betrothed her to, the Prince Royal. What would he be like? She had heard all sorts of strange things about him, his father, his friends, and his plans. And Ishvi, on the other hand, was angry. His foolish uncle had gone and joined in . . .
In this first volume of the All Things Impossible series, an ancient evil has returned. An ancient war has resumed. And for the first time in elven history, the Crown of the Realm has been stolen. But young Derora Saxen knows nothing of such things. When she sets out from her village with her best friend Kelin, she knows . . .
Peter is your typical high school student, but when his mother’s marriage falls apart he copes by dreaming up the story of Dorothea, an elf who lives in the magical Bois d’or forest. Releasing his frustrations in his French teacher’s nightly writing assignment, Peter shares Dorothea’s story with his teacher, imagining a world in which witches, a renegade elf lord . . .
Dorothea’s Song is a 400 page D&D-style Chosen One fantasy adventure novel, written in the pages of a journal of a boy growing up Catholic in the early ’80s. As we learn in the journal segments that start the piece and then occur at increasingly frequent intervals within the overall text, the story is written as an assignment (and labour [more . . .]
Action • adventure • elves • fantasy • magic – are the kind of words that light my imagination. They are also the tags for The Ghost King in the Web Fiction Guide Listings. The story blurb was interesting enough for me to mentally add it to my “To Be Read” list along with quite a few others. It [more . . .]