By
David Brown
Demetrius makes his first mistake when he lets his best friend Halcyon marry Eleyna, the love of his life, without saying a word. On the day of the wedding, he walks away from the Elencheran town of Dove's Meadow and joins the army.
He makes his second mistake when the pirate Black Iris tricks him into letting dozens of men, women and children die in a fire. Demetrius is imprisoned in grief and disgrace.
But he can atone. The Black Iris is dead. The Ivory Rose has risen to the top of the pirates and is leading brutal raids on the coast. If Demetrius can capture and kill her, he'll win his pardon.
And then Demetrius discovers the Ivory Rose is Eleyna. He must decide which will be his third mistake: losing his last chance at a pardon or destroying the one woman he's ever loved.
Read an excerpt:
From Chapter 25: The Edge of the World (29631)
Pockets of swirling magic dust rose from the surface of the pink and violet water as it came into contact with the white beam that formed the perimeter of all Elenchera. The beam was not a perfect circle around the world, or a straight line, but led a jagged and uneven course, creating four distinct edges from four heavily defined promontories.
The west edge of Elenchera had been known to the earliest settlers in Gremilda – the magic dust that rose from the surrounding ocean gave the Gremildans the silver streaks in their hair and their glistening blue eyes – but one had to stand right by the edge to be truly close to magic.
A small island of rock overlooked the west edge, its surface blemished only by the presence of eight beautifully carved statues that stood on the outskirts of the island. Each one depicted a Gremildan of great distinction. The oldest was of a pioneer named Victor who had led the first successful crossing of the Raintops Mountains, opening the route into West Gremilda in the Second Shard. The most recent was of Moravia, a brilliant naval commander who had kept the island safe from invasion in the Ninth Shard.
The island by the west edge had long been considered sacred ground to the Gremildans. Only the Protectors and scientists were ever permitted to make the short crossing across the ocean to step foot on the island. The code had been broken by successful rebellions in the past but none more desecrating than the arrival of the Eligantian colonists. Many of the colonists had made the journey to the island but despite relentless pressure and persecution they had failed to yield the secrets of how to cast magic.
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David Brown could be considered a fantasy fanatic, especially since he has spent the last 10 years developing a 47,000-year history for his fictional world of Elenchera. When converting his obsession into literary form, David commits himself to a rigorous writing and editing process before his work can meet his approval. Combined with the critical eye of his wife and a BA Hons in History and English, David's dedication leads him to his goal of inspiring readers through heartfelt stories and characters.
Although David is inspired primarily by fantasy fiction, he also finds his muse in the form of anime, world cinema, history, and biographies. His own books, Fezariu's Epiphany and A World Apart, and the in-progress Ansel's Remorse and The Stars Beneath the Parapets combine aspects from worlds both old and new into compelling tales of a world not soon forgotten. David himself certainly does not lack a spirit of adventure; in fact, he left his job in 2007 in order to spend a month travelling. Second only to meeting and marrying his wife, David counts this as one of the most amazing experiences of his life.
LINKS:
Website – http://elenchera.com
Blog – http://tweeding.com
Twitter - @elenchera
Facebook - davidmbrownauthor
David will be awarding a $25 Amazon Gift Card to a randomly drawn commenter during this book blast and the review tour. Follow both for more chances to win!
How long did it take you to write this book? The worldbuilding sounds very elaborated.
ReplyDeletegalaschick78 at gmail(dot)com
Hi Gala,
DeleteIt took me a year to write A World Apart. The world building that preceded it was more than ten years of work. I still have nightmares thinking about it!
Thank you for hosting me today, Andrea.
ReplyDeleteI really appreciate your amazing support :)
David sure is a handsome looking dude. ^_^
ReplyDeleteLol Sherry :) Thank you. I prefer the caricature to the real guy. He's nothing to shout about, I promise you. It's my poor wife I feel sorry for the most ;)
DeleteAnother great excerpt, thank you.
ReplyDeleteKit3247(at)aol(dot)com
Thank you Ingeborg. I appreciate you visiting so many of the blogs :) I hope you've found some great sites on your travels.
DeleteNice excerpt.
ReplyDeletebn100candg(at)hotmail(dot)com
Thank you so much bn100 :)
DeleteI would love to read your books! A World Apart sounds like a good fantasy book and I like the cover.
ReplyDeleteanne.j2 (at) gmail.com
How do you pronounce Halcyon??
ReplyDeletejosiehink122026(at)gmail(dot)com
Enjoyed the excerpt. Intriguing cover. Definitely adding your book to my reading list.
ReplyDeletebhometchko(at)hotmail(dot)com
What an excellent introduction to this author and I look forward to reading A World Apart. I am a history buff and love the idea of combining this with fantasy!
ReplyDeletemruble38@gmail.com