![]() ![]() This story begins with Prince Foxbrush, made heir to the throne after the king’s son, Lionheart, was thrown out of the kingdom for reasons explained in previous novels. It’s not that you must know of previous events in order to appreciate the storyline, it’s simply that the story is so complex and references so much that’s gone on before that you cannot fully appreciate the novel without some idea of the rest of the series.Īny one novel in the series is great, it’s when you understand the full breadth of Stengl’s world that you begin to see her brilliance. ![]() Up until this point in the Tales of Goldstone Wood, I would perfectly comfortable saying that you could read any novel as a standalone story, then retreat to the previous books. As her wedding day dawns, Daylily flees into the dangerous Wilderlands, her only desire to vanish from living memory.īut Foxbrush, determined to rescue his betrothed, pursues Daylily into a new world of magic and peril, a world where vicious Faerie beasts hold sway, a world invaded by a lethal parasite. Not the prince she loves, handsome and dispossessed Lionheart, but his cousin, the awkward and foolish Prince Foxbrush. ![]() ![]() Also by this author: Golden Daughter, Dragonwitch, Starflower, Moonblood, Veiled Rose, Heartless, Fallen Star: A Short Story of Goldstone Wood, Draven's Lightīy her father's wish, Lady Daylily is betrothed to the Prince of Southlands. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |