Tag: Fairies

  • SUMMER CYCLONE: Magic at Myers Beach Book 4 by Alan B. Gibson – Fantasy Romance, Urban Fantasy, Fairies

     

    The citizens of the three fairy kingdoms clash, forced to live shoulder-to-shoulder alongside ungoverned Outliers. In Summer Cyclone, fourth book of Alan B. Gibson’s Magic at Myers Beach series, unassuming tea-shop manager Stefán tries to find love while keeping all of fairy society from fracturing.

    The three fairy kings, Theos, Zsombor, and Christophe, evacuate their people to Myers Beach. It’s only here that they have any chance of recreating fairy dust after their old sources had been poisoned, and saving every fairy life. They take in the Outliers, remnants of a fallen kingdom, and at first find good will between the groups. But with thousands of fairies moving in, they have to keep everyone on a short leash or else risk humans catching wind of their new neighbors. Resentment of these strange Outliers builds.

    Stefán, a close confidant to Theos, struggles to keep anti-Outlier sentiment at bay with the help of some enigmatic and knowledgeable new friends. Rumors of him giving the Outliers special treatment grow stronger as some fairies begin to suspect that he’s actually one of them.

    As an orphan of asylum-seeking parents, Stefán doesn’t even know his true ancestry.

    But though his responsibilities weigh heavy on him, Stefán finds a bright spot in his life. He falls for Julie, the human woman who—even as a relative stranger—offered him kindness and support while he watched over Christophe’s recently-possessed sister, Princess Zoë.

    Julie herself hesitates to be honest about her feelings, a recent failed relationship fresh in her mind. They tip-toe around each other, but draw gradually closer. Stefán makes her morning coffee and teaches her to cook. Julie shares her love of skateboarding, and the adventures she and Christophe had while travelling together the past few months. And at first, they bond as they help Zoë recover despite having lost her magic and wings to the witch possessing her body.

    Julie worries, however, that Stefán and Zoë are getting too close. And with nearly all of her friends now fairies, it’s easy for her to feel like she has no lasting place in their world.

    All the while, a murderous figure from the past—the very man who poisoned the old fairy dust—returns to take advantage of the weakened kingdoms.

    Cross-kingdom tension builds beneath the surface until the fairies are nearly erupting. Agitators push greater and greater anger at the Outliers, empowered by the fear of a ticking clock. The royals only have a few weeks left to find the final ingredient to fairy dust before their people starve.

    Each time Stefán and his friends think they have a solution to one of their pressing issues, it leads to greater outcry from the populace and more opportunity for sinister forces to take control. The patience of their people wears thin, and eventually, so does the patience they have for each other. Even a loving group of friends can be made to turn on each other with the right combination of fear and magic.

    But with his willingness to tackle impossible tasks, and his deep desire to understand himself, Stefán opposes the destruction of his world while easily pulling readers into his shoes.

    He and Julie are both outsiders among the people they love. But neither of them lets that stand in the way when their friends need help, proving that even if they don’t have the title of fairy royalty, they have no shortage of strength or nobility.

    As it brings together both old friends and old foes from across the series, Summer Cyclone explores meaningful emotional threads.

    Myers Beach shines with the return of characters from previous installments, particularly the fairy royals Theos, Lily, Zsombor, and Greta. Their distinct personalities weave together and clash now that they’re a team with the weight of fairy society on their shoulders.

    Julie’s just happy to have her best friends back in her life, especially as Lily and Greta reveal that she’s going to be godmother to their future fairy children. But as a human, Julie’s as far from fairy royalty as someone can be. She has no magic. No authority. And as matters of state become overwhelming, she fears she’ll be left out of her friends’ lives once again.

    Stefán’s easy friendship with Theos and Alias—nearly his adoptive brothers—is tested by the conflicting demands of royalty. While they all want the same peace between the different fairy peoples, Stefán will have to learn how to navigate changing dynamics of power.

    Personal relationships blend into societal strife with dire stakes. Stefán and Julie lift each other up even as they struggle with their insecurities. And as the fairy kingdoms approach a vital choice in how their way of life will change—unity or division—Summer Cyclone delivers on the promises of its preceding books with a suspenseful whirlwind romance.

    Read the whole series of Magic at Myers Beach!

  • SUMMER STORM: Magic at Myers Beach Book 2 by Alan B. Gibson – Urban Fantasy, Romance, Fairies

     

    In Summer Storm, the second book of Alan B. Gibson’s Magic at Myers Beach series, local business owner Greta the Witch has a chance at fame, fortune, and fairytale love—if she can keep it all from being stolen first.

    Picking up cleanly after Summer Thunder (Book 1 in the series), this story opens with Greta worrying about her social life. Her best friend Lily has left on an extended honeymoon with her husband Theos the King. Fortunately, her acquaintance, Julie, moves back to town, and while they soon develop a close friendship, things get awkward when she learns that Julia received a massive financial gift from Lily and Theos, and she was left with nothing.

    Greta can at least focus on her business, the Witch’s Cauldron, and being the star of a reality show that’s planning to film her daily life. And when Greta meets a mysterious and charming man—Zsombor, or “Dos” to his friends—she finds herself rocketed to a level of stardom she couldn’t have imagined. She attends an opening gala for the renovated Fairy Kingdom tea house, and after a mixture of disastrous and fabulous public appearances she becomes Myers Beach’s rising influencer star.

    Summer Storm paints a cheeky but emotionally resonant portrait of stardom in the modern, fickle internet age.

    Greta’s sudden fame brings incredible business success and access to a world of fashion, connections, and glamor that dazzles her. But the internet audience constantly demands more posts and more of Greta’s witchy brand. She relies on Julie for her social media expertise, especially as the adoration of fans threatens to overwhelm her.

    Fame is a double-edged sword. And while Greta indulges in so many adoring eyes, that fame distances her from the people she truly wants to connect with. Her online persona dominates her presence among professional peers, and with all the time that her media presence takes to maintain, Greta falters in some of the most important relationships in her real life—most worryingly, her growing romance with the otherworldly Dos.

    When a major scandal break over Greta’s head, she faces an even darker side to notoriety. An accusation of murder, no matter how quickly proven false, staggers Greta’s image and sets her up for a much more focused, malevolent force.

    Greta meets unique, fantastical characters along her journey—friend and foe alike.

    Dos, despite his strangeness, proves himself capable of the seemingly impossible, as he charms Greta by connecting with the soul of the woods, bringing magic to her singing performances at a local retirement home, and even helping her fund her charity.

    Greta befriends the similarly magical Alias, who proves to be much more than the handsome beach bum she first imagines him to be. He and Dos maintain a sense of mystique and unpredictability, all while showing Greta a world of wonders and good fortune—before she even learns that they’re actually fairies.

    With yet more characters like the gossip star Rona Divine, skateboard prodigy Christophe, and of course the multi-talented Julie, Summer Storm fills its setting with a vibrant and exciting cast.

    But as Greta’s good fortune starts to turn, and the cruel sorceress Zsa Zsa Hajdu intrudes on her life, she struggles to hold onto her important connections.

    Greta’s idyllic adventure of romance and fame begins to unravel. Zsa Zsa wields great and terrible influence in both her personal and public worlds, and by the time Greta realizes the danger she’s up against, the true witch might be impossible to stop.

    Greta turns to her friends in the tug-of-war for Dos’s heart, but she’ll need to embrace her own strengths and authentic passions to stand up against supernatural danger.

    Readers will love Greta for her drive and fears alike.

    She becomes caught in the difficult questions of what truly matters to her in life, and what she’s willing to do or give up for it. Her layered, realistic personality plays well off when matched with Dos’s fantastical attitude, creating a romance that feels genuinely transformative for both characters.

    Ending with a sharp cliffhanger, Summer Storm will set readers up eagerly for the next installment of the series, Summer Lightning, with conflicts of the fairy kingdoms stepping into the spotlight.

     

  • THE CLAIMING by J.A. Nielsen – Young Adult, Fantasy, Action & Adventure

     

    OZMA 1st Place Blue and Gold BadgeThe illegitimate son of a human king accidentally binds himself to a Fae princess in J.A. Nielsen’s YA adventure, The Claiming. As war bears down on the kingdom of Telridge, can the two of them break the spell in time?

    Lord Ferrous, ruler of Telridge, smells conflict coming for his people. Even so, he denies a mysterious request from the king of the Winter Fae, and sets his sons to prepare their land for war. His eldest, Prince Dirk, gathers his knights and begins to evacuate the common people to the protection of Telridge castle. His younger son Spense, born out of wedlock to the castle’s head cook, uses his finicky magic to Claim a bridge over a powerful river. If he succeeds, the passing will be barred to their enemies. But he fails to realize that the powerful living force he encounters isn’t the bridge at all.

    Dewy, crown princess of the Summer Fae, is Claimed instead of the bridge. Her aunt, Lady Radiant, must exile her from their lands. While Dewy’s careless spirit chafed under Radiant’s authority, she grieves for her lost home.

    Spense resolves to break the Claiming, no matter what it takes.

    The two of them journey on a diplomatic mission to the Fae, while Dirk and his knights begin to fight against an army of both humans, from the kingdom of Verden, and Winter Fae. Spense seeks both an alliance with Lady Radiant, and the means to free Dewy of the bonds he put on her. But this journey will ask more of him and Dewy than they know.

    Nielsen brings her characters to full and vibrant life.

    Dewy and Spense both feel that they’re different from those around them, unsure of their place in the world. Though they’re initially brought together by magic, they begin to form a genuine bond and bring out positive change in one another. They find confidence in their abilities and, as they come to understand each other, share their fears and sorrows.

    Even antagonistic characters show their complexity. Lady Radiant, though reserved and steely in diplomatic talks, wants desperately to help her niece. Prince Dirk fights courageously and sees past the social standing of Flora, a farm girl, to realize that she could help his knights to save Telridge. The king of winter himself, Lumine, is driven by an understandable need, even if he keeps his secrets closely guarded.

    The battles, both emotional and literal, keep a gripping pace.

    Faerie magic, fire-tipped arrows, gunpowder, and even failed alchemy experiments clash in the battle for Telridge. Dewy wields phenomenal elemental power, Spense offers his clever inventions, and Dirk and Flora must devise creative strategies to hold back the army arrayed against them. Exciting, tense scenes play out as knights and faeries fight. All the while, the characters try to weather the mental toll of waging war.

    Spense bears responsibility for all of his people as he becomes Telridge’s diplomat to the Fae courts.

    Throughout Nielsen’s luminous, intricately-described Fey lands, Spense grapples with the guilt of what he’s done to Dewy, while Dewy herself contemplates what she feels for him, how much of her fondness can be true with the Claiming upon her. The two risk life, limb, and even more for each other as a curious, subtle mystery forms around their meetings with the Winter Fae.

    The Claiming is a story of courage, connection, and the responsibility of a person to care for those around them. Fans of fantasy and faeries will love this fast-paced adventure.

     

    5 Stars! Best Book Chanticleer Book Reviews