Tag: DRUIDS

  • THE QUARRY: The Druid Chronicles Book 4 by A.M. Linden – Historical Fiction, Brittania, Druids

     

    Druids struggle to evade Christian persecution in A.M. Linden’s The Quarry, Book Four in the Druid Chronicles, a fast-paced adventure through medieval Brittania.

    Although dwindling in number and hunted by Christians who fear their pagan rituals, Druids still roam the land. Linden explores these oppressed people and their belief system, one that approaches life and conflict with reason and attempts to find a peaceful resolution—a novel idea during this historical time.

    The High Priestess Feywn’s health is failing. Our hero, Druid priest Caelym, does everything in his power to save her so she can pass on her vital role in their religion.

    The necessary ritual takes time and specific ingredients. As he hunts for those sacred herbs, he is captured by the local sheriff whose second in command, the fanatic Christian Matthew, only wants Caelym’s death.

    Cyri, the young Druid woman who would become the next High Priestess, goes in search of Caelym but finds only his bag, weapon, and clothes. Fearing him kidnapped, Cyri journeys to save him in a hunt or be hunted Dark Age. Each step puts Cyri’s and Caelym’s survival into question.

    Linden peoples this story with characters from across her series whose roles stand clear and meaningful—including the villains.

    Stefan, the Saxon warrior recently appointed sheriff of the Shire of Codswallow, weighs two problems against one another. His wife’s uncle wants to marry her—over Stefan’s dead body. And Stefan has just run into a wanted Druid who might prove useful.

    The different POVs create unpredictable and entertaining twists, as Stefen captures Caelym on his way to an inn where he hopes to receive a hearty lunch and a roll in the hay with Cyri, who he believes to be a barmaid. Little does Stefan know Cyri’s connection to Caelym’s mistress Feywn.

    Stefan first wants Caelym simply for his value as a hostage, but recognizes his talent as a gifted musician and storyteller, and refuses to give in to Matthew’s murderous desire. When an attempt is made on Stefan’s life, his understanding of his place in the world is shaken to its core, and only Caelym can give him the perspective and advice he needs—both to save himself and plot revenge.

    For lovers of historical fiction, Celtic and Druidic literature, and classic fantasy like Tolkien’s Lord of the Rings, the story of Stefan, Caelym, and Cyri in The Quarry will cast an enrapturing spell, making them fall in love with Linden’s characters, both heroic and villainous, and appreciate these ancient pagan ways.

    Linden’s masterful storytelling in The Quarry stands wonderfully on its own and as continuation of the Druid Chronicles, leaving new readers excited to finish the whole series.

     

  • DRUIDS Of The SKY by Dana Willow – Coming of Age, Steampunk, LGBT+ YA Fiction

     

    A young adult fantasy gem, Dana Willow’s Druids of the Sky, is a story about the power of found family and self-discovery.

    On a steampunk version of Earth, humans and druids have tensely coexisted for much of known history. Leah lives a content life with her merchant father aboard Skyport, a giant world-traveling airship held aloft by a metal called Heracleum. Another merchant boards Skyport with the hope of selling his druid creatures to humans as pets, but when one imprints on Leah, she discovers she’s not as human as she thought.

    Revealed to be a half-druid, her calm life traversing the human world is about to change forever.

    Leah leaves Skyport to seek out a druid community in hopes of finding whatever remains of her infamous family. Leah has a lot to discover about herself and must do so carefully in the face of prejudice against her nature.

    After departing from Skyport, Leah comes across a small druid town and meets Aspin, a young druid also struggling to find her place in the world. She is an alchemy school dropout and struggles with insecurity in her magical abilities. Together they embark on a journey to uncover Leah’s family, finding plenty of danger along with small but significant acts of kindness.

    Druids of the Sky is a page-turner with a flowing style that fits the young adult genre wonderfully.

    Author Dana Willow creates authentic emotional connections among her characters, growing them into complex and dynamic people. At the heart of the book is a romance intolerable to this world of druid and human conflict. This beautiful element of the story adds significant depth to the polarizing races and cultures of human and druid societies.

    Throughout Leah’s journey to find her parents, she encounters many who wish her harm, but just as many who hold out hope that one day druids and humans can live in peace. Druids of the Sky is a reminder that we are never alone and that there is always kindness in the world.

    This story shows the beauty in a journey shared with others.

    Dana Willow writes an ambiguous ending with many questions unanswered. This sly trick leaves readers with plenty of room for personal interpretations and hope that the story will continue well beyond the last page.

    Dana Willow’s debut novel Druids of the Sky is a heartfelt and relatable coming-of-age story, a must-read young adult fantasy novel. In a massive and congested genre, Druids of the Sky adds a needed touch of kindness and compassion.

     

    5 Stars! Best Book Chanticleer Book Reviews

  • The VALLEY (The Druid Chronicles Book Two) by A.M. Linden – Medieval Historical Fiction, Alternate Religions Historical Fiction, Ancient Civilizations Historical Fiction

    Herrwn, Chief Priest of a secret Druid community, has spent his entire, privileged life in Llwddawanden, a secluded valley kept separate from the spread of Christianity from both Saxon and Celt alike, in A.M. Linden’s The Valley (The Druid Chronicles, Book Two).

    Nonbelievers of the Great Mother Goddess threaten inevitable persecution. But Herrwn has maintained the traditional practices passed to him by his own father. As an orator in charge of repeating the legends and beliefs of his people, he knows the importance and the heavy responsibility required by his sacred office. With the decrease in believers outside of the valley, he understands the precarious position of the community and the difficult balance he must maintain.

    Over the course of his long life, he has come to rely on his cousins, Olyrrwd (Chief Healer) and Ossiam (Chief Oracle). Still, as the years pass, his loyalties become torn when what starts as simple gibes between the two priests morphs into unspoken fear of what the other might do to gain favor with the various priestesses chosen as the Goddess Incarnate. Having lost his beloved wife and young child, Herrwn grows closer to Olyrrwd and becomes the peacekeeper between the priests to keep what remaining family he has left.

    When a promising young man, Caelym, the son of a former Goddess Incarnate, becomes the sole priest-in-training, the cousins further divide on the right course of action for the clan. At each turn, dissension and sedition threaten every belief and tradition that holds the people together, and Herrwn will have to make decisions that could change the course of his community forever.

    One notable strength of this prequel lies in Linden’s character development.

    Herrwn becomes real as his life story unfolds. The tragic loss of both Lothwen, his consort, and Lillywen, his young daughter, forge him into a contemplative and thoughtful character. The reader will feel his grief through his shared memories of their time together and the depth of the love that ran deep enough to keep him from ever becoming the consort of any other woman nor the father of any more children.

    The remembrance of his doting and proud father’s advice and the love of a mother long gone will resonate with readers. We witness his strength and forethought as he tries to soothe the growing tensions and tread the choppy waters of change surging through his once-tranquil life. However, Herrwn is only one of many such characters so well developed that they seem to leap from the pages into real life.

    Olyrrwd, the physician combining herbal and ritual healing, is another such character.

    His charm and humor will make him a reader-favorite with his sarcastic, albeit pithy comments. As the novel continues, the two become closer than just their familial bonds of cousins. Each is a sounding board for the other, and their relationship is reminiscent of that one friend every person has–the one who understands without words and knows us better than we know ourselves.

    However, the mixture isn’t complete without a bit of chaos, and that is where their cousin Ossiam takes the stage.

    The reader will love to hate him as much as Olyrrwd does in that classic villain way, second-guessing his every move and questioning his every motive. With his charismatic control over the young Goddess Incarnate and his scheming to gain more than her favor, he is a perfect catalyst to the majority of the boat-rocking that disturbs both cousins’ lives. This collision of values causes Herrwn’s peacemaker qualities to emerge.

    The ongoing battles between Olyrrwd and Ossiam create a palatable tension and serve to drive the force within the plot itself. It also reminds the reader that although millennia separate Herrwn, Ossiam, and Olyrrwd from the modern world, people are essentially the same. Fear, anger, love, hate–the emotions that make us human are the same as those of every human, creating a surprising connection to these pagan Druids.

    A theme within this frame story prequel revolves around change and its impact on human relationships and cultures.

    Right from the start, the Druid clan fights a dramatic shift within the Saxon kingdoms surrounding their valley. Set during the spread of Christianity and the turning away from pagan gods and goddesses, the sacred shrines and villages retreated into an even more secluded region.

    For many years, their isolation kept away the influences brought by Roman occupation; however, as more and more Saxons converted, the worshipers of the Mother Goddess began to follow suit, including members of Herrwn’s own family. Believers begin to defect and lose faith.

    For a Chief Priest set to educate future priests to pass on their very heritage, these changes literally show the end of an ancient religion. He must watch the foundation of his life shift and begin to crumble.

    Every choice and every thought is consumed with rituals that are fast becoming meaningless. Reconciling–much less accepting–these changes will cost Herrwn more than a sleepless night. Not only is the clan facing a loss of faith, but the mature priest must also learn to live with a younger generation that seems to disregard many of the traditions he is fighting so hard to save.

    From a Goddess Incarnate chosen for her beauty rather than wisdom to her blood-thirsty consort challenging better trained and better equipped Saxon enemies, the generation set to lead poses a change to the somber, thoughtful people of Herrwn’s youth.

    With the attention to detail, explanation of ancient rituals, and the mythology within the clan’s legends, this novel builds a community, exploring a people about which little is actually known. It’s an extraordinary portrayal, breathing life into a long-dead civilization. Readers feel Herrwn struggle as he endeavors to keep a secret Druid community alive, fracturing from within, persecuted from without by the spreading Christian church. Highly recommended!

     

     

    5 Stars! Best Book Chanticleer Book Reviews

     

  • The DRUIDS: An Informal Read by Ilene Birkwood – Paganism/Neo-Paganism, Druidism, Religious Studies – Science & Religion

    The DRUIDS: An Informal Read by Ilene Birkwood – Paganism/Neo-Paganism, Druidism, Religious Studies – Science & Religion

    The Druids are not just a fictional group of magic wielders in funny hats, but a people of ancient Celtic cultures that prosper to this day. If you are looking for a short, accessible guide to the history and way of life of the Druid people, Ilene Birkwood offers an easy to understand introduction to Druidry in The Druids: An Informal Read. Druidry is not a religion like some may think, but a way of life through peace and preservation of nature.

    Druids have seen a surge in numbers in recent years as a result of people around the globe feeling dissatisfied in a world continually damaged by pollution, greed, and war. These people wish to promote a more peaceful and simpler way of life. Birkwood’s guide touches on different areas of the culture throughout the long history of the druids, such as their education system, various sacred sites, history of persecution, and, yes, their roles as witches. Birkwood even shows us how Druidry is practiced today.

    Indeed, the group has a rich history and culture, and this short book only brushes the surface of these fascinating people. Birkwood wrote the book because she intended to create an introduction to the subject that was quick and easy to read—and she’s succeeded. Her passion for the topic leads her on a two-year journey of researching and traveling to various druid sites. After setting the book down, readers will yearn to learn more. Thankfully, the index is an excellent resource and can be used as a jumping-off point for those whose curiosity is piqued by Birkwood’s endeavor.

    Especially in the chapter on the Druid education system, Birkwood’s research is well developed and an intriguing read. The overview of famous druid sites, including the most famous, Stonehenge, will inspire wanderlust in all readers. Though Stonehenge is a breathtaking and mysterious landmark, the other druid sites described are even more exciting because they are mostly unknown to the general public and will encourage further research and perhaps exploration for those so inclined.

    Ilene Birkwood is also the author of her New Zealand Mystery series, including What to do About Emma and Deadly Deception, and a memoir, The Second Torpedo, concerning her time in WWII. Birkwood, a U.K. native, has worked in Silicon Valley and lived in New Zealand for fourteen years. Her work has been translated into many languages as well.

    If you are looking to dive into the infinite and diverse world of history, a study of the rich archives and dynamic culture of Druids is the perfect place to start. Ilene Birkwood’s The Druids: An Informal Read is just the right hook for history lovers and those who may be interested in dipping their toes into the subject. When all is said and done, every reader is sure to want more from Ilene Birkwood – and her druids!