Tag: Metaphysical Fiction

  • A CLAN CHIEF’S DAUGHTER: She Who Rides Horses Book 2 by Sarah V. Barnes – Historical Fiction, Ancient World, Metaphysical Fiction

    Caught in the midst of a succession crisis, Naya sacrifices much of herself to be the dutiful girl she thinks her father expects. In A Clan Chief’s Daughter by Sarah V. Barnes, Naya’s kept in the dark while enemies plot her family’s downfall.

    In the previous book of the series, She Who Rides Horses, Naya began the monumental task of bonding with the wild horses of the Pontic-Caspian Steppe. Guided by dreams of purpose alongside the red filly Réhda, they’d gone so far as to gallop free together. But returning to her clan after a winter apart, Naya finds a terrible captivity waiting for both her and the horses she loves.

    A confluence of tragedy and treachery leaves Naya’s father, Potis, vulnerable in his role as Chief.

    The clans of the Plānos tribe are soon convening for their annual Gathering. As this year’s host, Potis is expected to supply a plentiful animal sacrifice, especially since he hopes to claim his late father’s position as Plānos Chief of Chiefs. That would be hard enough after a brutal winter, but without warning much of the clan’s livestock are slaughtered in a senseless and suspicious attack.

    The stage set, a captivating young man arrives as the clan’s seeming savior. Wailos, son of Potis’s main rival, helps the clan capture a herd of horses that had become habituated to humans—the very same whose trust Naya earned. They are to be sacrificed in place of the clan’s missing livestock.

    Wailos shows interest in Naya, who’s begun preparations to be presented as a young woman at the Gathering. He promises a rich bride price of livestock, and such a marriage could prove a valuable political alliance in itself. Naya disregards her own reservations about Wailos in the hopes of helping her father and maybe even sparing the horses.

    Naya’s self-denial extends to her loved ones and her very purpose, as she holds herself responsible for the suffering of the horses in captivity.

    She refuses her grandmother Awija’s lessons on the importance of dreams and following one’s own heart. Visiting the horses is more than she can bear, especially as it brings her close to Aytal. While Naya holds deep resentment towards the young man, she can’t forget the connection and affection that grew between them over the winter.

    Naya’s mother Sata leaves the clan for her childhood home alongside Oyuun, Aytal’s father, and Naya refuses to see it as anything but a betrayal of her and Potis. She turns away from the pain of her conflicted feelings and into the role of a clan chief’s daughter.

    When the promises of that role unravel around her, she risks losing her freedom, her loved ones, and her heart’s deepest desire forever.

    Barnes builds a societal conflict with complicated systems of alliance and tradition, enriching the story and historical detail through their combination.

    The contest for power as Plānos Chief of Chiefs is well-grounded in the immediate and daunting challenges Potis faces as he struggles to stabilize his people. All the while, threads of conspiracy close in around Potis and Naya alike, with the villains always a step ahead. Potis decides not to reveal the danger Wailos poses to Naya, building a powerful sense of dread as Wailos uses the social expectations of their tribe to draw her into a cruel trap.

    This conflict revolves around a theme of cooperation versus competition. Potis understands the necessity of maintaining peaceful bonds within and beyond their tribe, but he faces people who are willing to destroy anyone to grasp power.

    A Clan Chief’s Daughter shows the injustice of strict gender roles and the vital importance of fighting against them. Barnes uses her rich characters to illuminate different facets of this oppression.

    Awija and Sata both hope to turn Naya away from accepting what is expected of her—to be traded away as a commodity through marriage. But though Sata’s struggle to understand her desires against social stricture mirrors Naya’s own, Naya can’t listen without confronting the parts of herself she wants only to escape.

    Throughout Naya’s preparation for the Gathering, Awija tries to instill an understanding of self-possessed womanhood in her and the other girls. Having come from a different culture in her youth, Awija contrasts the beliefs of the Plānos. She implies how such gender roles are not essential facets of nature but rather tools of control and power consolidation—tools that this story’s villains wield to harrowing effect.

    After months trying to put her wants and fears aside to better serve her expected role, Naya is betrayed completely. She hopes that there might yet be friends she can turn to, but will only reach them if she learns to trust herself again.

    Naya’s inner journey takes her through despair at how much she loses, but also an enlightening catharsis. She sacrifices her connection to the horses in a way that mirrors Aytal’s earlier sacrifice of his skill as a bowman, making A Clan Chief’s Daughter an effective rejoinder to the themes established in She Who Rides Horses.

    Once Naya accepts that she cannot separate her love, anger, and grief from one another, she can finally begin to brave her nightmares to recover her own destiny.

    In its well-crafted combination of vulnerable personal journey, well-researched ancient setting, and commentary on social roles that still manifest in our world today, A Clan Chief’s Daughter by Sarah V. Barnes will fascinate and satisfy in equal measure. A worthy successor to the first book in the series, She Who Rides Horses.

    Buy it now through Bookshop.org!

  • SHE WHO RIDES HORSES: A Saga of the Ancient Steppe Book One by Sarah V. Barnes – Historical Fiction, Ancient World, Horse Fiction

     

    Wild horses race across the ancient Pontic-Caspian Steppe, hunted by predators and pastoral clans. But in Sarah V. Barnes’s She Who Rides Horses, Naya, daughter of a clan chief, ventures beyond the understanding of her people to form a bond of true partnership with a young filly.

    Naya spends day and night watching a wild herd, drawn to a filly who shares her burning red hair and a dream of purpose to be found between them. But, nearing adulthood, Naya will soon be expected to marry and likely leave her clan for another. Her mother Sata and grandmother Ajiwa conspire to give Naya the chance to prove that she can forge a bond with the wild horses like those her people treasure with their livestock.

    Though she has a vibrant will and the promise of a mystical vision behind her, Naya risks much more than social standing to ride the red filly.

    An accident leaves Naya terribly injured, separated from most of her clan on their migration south, and caught on the steppe as winter winds howl. Sata has only two mistrusted strangers—travelers Oyuun and Aytal—and a few sleds of spare supplies to watch over her daughter throughout moons of cold and hunger. But in the midst of the snow, a familiar band of horses draws near their camp.

    Through the wondrous vistas of the spirit world, the precarity of survival, and the choice whether to forgive the young man who wounded her, Naya reawakens to her dream of becoming She Who Rides Horses.

    Barnes fleshes out the Pontic-Caspian Steppe of 4000 BCE with complex and well-researched societies.

    Naya’s people live with a palpable connection to the natural world. Their relationships to plants, animals, and the landscape itself show how comprehensively their pastoral lifestyle shapes both daily life and culture. She Who Rides Horses explores the power structures in such a society, with Naya’s father Potis balancing his influence against that of the clan’s priests who claim sole access to the realm of the spiritual—something which Naya herself could threaten.

    Barnes builds this story on an impressive foundation of historic research for such a long-gone time. Drawing from archaeological and genomic findings, she presents a fictional but realistic setting for such a monumental development as the early domestication of the horse. The words and names of her characters even reference the Proto-Indo-European language, among those of other nearby cultures. For lovers of ancient history, Barnes includes a list of references on her author website.

    This historical detail comes through in colorful descriptions of every location and the tasks required to live within them. Wilderness and pockets of human settlement alike become palpable. As this world flows through the senses of each character, it reveals more about them both.

    She Who Rides Horses stands out for its central cast caught between conflicting burdens and desires.

    Naya and Sata share a painful distance from their own culture. Sata yearns for the far-away people of her childhood, and Naya bucks against patriarchal limitations while hoping that her elders can learn to appreciate the horses as she does. Oyuun, having lost his beloved many years ago, finds a connection growing between himself and Sata that could tear the bonds of both of their lives. Aytal gives up everything that he can in pursuit of forgiveness, even if it means turning away from his own purpose.

    Each must find their true path forward, and decide which responsibilities to drop from their shoulders—or which to take on.

    She Who Rides Horses switches between these characters’ perspectives, showing a more rounded view of their ancient world. No two have the same thoughts on their societies or relationships. The more readers learn of these disparate people along their shared journey, the more deeply they’ll care for each of them.

    For anyone interested in ancient history, nuanced character-driven stories, or of course our world-changing equine companions, She Who Rides Horses by Sarah V. Barnes will satisfy and fascinate in equal measure.

    Readers will gladly bound right into the second book of the Saga of the Ancient Steppe, A Clan Chief’s Daughter.

     

     

  • APOCALYPSE In OUR TIME: The Accountant’s Apprentice Book 3 by Dennis M. Clausen – Paranormal, Metaphysical Fiction, Contemporary Social Issues

     

    In The Accountant’s Apprentice III: Apocalypse In Our Time by Dennis M. Clausen, the director of a homeless shelter sees subtle changes in the community around him, changes that are both worrisome and bizarre—portending a change to the world beyond human understanding.

    The story of Justin Moore, director of a homeless shelter in San Diego, continues. In the previous books in the series, he has met individuals who seem to be not quite of this world. A.C., a mysterious man in a wheelchair who played an important role earlier in the trilogy, is gone as of the third book, but his wheelchair is now being used by another man— seemingly catatonic and with no name. This man is known only as “Levi” by the staff at the bus depot where he was found, but Justin finds there is something more to him beneath the surface. Levi seems to have certain things in common with A.C., but with unique abilities. Justin is warned by a woman that the man he knows as Levi may be dangerous, but is he? And who is she, anyway?

    So many questions are raised, and Justin has few if any answers. In the previous book, he saw a demonic army gathering on the horizon. Was that real? A.C. had given Justin a limited ability to see the future, and a horrifying promise of things to come:

    “No one else saw what I saw that day. They only saw the huge, monstrous tsunami wave approaching from the west and engulfing the Mission Beach Pier. They did not see the demonic army forming on the horizon and threatening every living thing on the shore.

    “… A. C. did what he said he would do. He used me as his camera to see present events—but also future possibilities. What I saw on the pier was not only a vision of the tidal wave that was approaching from the west. It was a vision of the future and the demonic forces of pure evil that were aligned against all life on the planet Earth.”

    Apocalypse in Our Time gives us a peek into the future— or perhaps a peek into our own minds. A story of the world coming of age, so to speak, with menace on the horizon and possible salvation, if such a thing can exist.

    As this story continues, the narrative becomes deeply intriguing. The beginning reintroduces readers to the setting and characters, and once this final part of the series begins in earnest it gives us a sense of wonder and mystery, while at the same time the alarming scenario escalates around Justin. The intensifying plot echoes through well-fleshed-out characters like Angelina, a young girl living in the homeless shelter, fascinated by Shakespeare and his works, who explores her own unique abilities—and connection with Levi.

    End of the world, or something more? That is left to the reader to decide. Certainly, after the events that the characters see and experience, the world—and they—will never be the same. Dennis Clausen’s third work in his trilogy is both ephemeral and thoughtful, making the reader wonder about the end of the world well after the end of the book.

     

  • EARTHLY VESSELS by David T. Isaak – Metaphysical Fiction, Coming of Age, Mystical Fiction

    In Earthy Vessels by David T. Isaak, Crystal Keeling encounters a mystical power that sends her on a journey of true chaos.

    Crystal wasn’t necessarily seeking spiritual enlightenment on the streets of Manhattan, but there were certainly plenty of fools and charlatans peddling it back in 1969 – as well as both legal and illegal means of achieving ‘higher consciousness’ one way or another.

    Fortunately – and unfortunately – for Crystal, the man who found her, cult leader Anton Reginald LaMarr, and his Children of Pan were the real deal, whether they knew it or not. They had discovered a ritual that could draw down the soul of a Hero, and planned to implant that Hero’s soul into Crystal – using the usual orgiastic methods.

    Crystal was fine with the ritual sex but had not signed up for imprisonment and pregnancy. She ran far and fast and never looked back.

    When she discovered that she really was pregnant despite the birth control regimen she religiously maintained, she took it in stride – as did all the other members of whichever commune or co-op she happened to be living in at the time.

    The child, however, a boy she named Rainbow Bounty, rebelled against her counterculture lifestyle every bit as much as Crystal had rebelled against her conservative upbringing before him.

    Thus, readers follow Rainbow Bounty, who calls himself by his initials RB, pronounced ‘Arby’, because having people in the early 2000s think you’re named for a brand of fast food is much better than advertising that your mother was and still is a ‘flower child’. Arby makes his way from a job in the oil fields of Bahrain to Portland, Oregon because his mother hinted that there is a life-threatening event on the horizon.

    But she’s not the one whose life is about to be threatened and thrown off its course.

    The ritual that gave Arby life is about to come crashing down on his head – one way or another – and the fate of the world rests on him reconnecting with the abilities of his past lifetimes.

    Whether those abilities will help or hinder is a crapshoot of the highest order, because Arby isn’t the avatar of some long-dead Hero or God. That would be much too easy. Arby is, as he has so often been in his life, the avatar of chaos, the embodiment of Murphy’s Law.

    Arby is destiny’s Fool, and his purpose is to cast all plans into disarray. Even his own.

    Earthly Vessels, beginning as it does in the counterculture movement of the 1960s, reads with a sense of nostalgia for that brief era, and Crystal’s acceptance of and equally brief involvement with the Children of Pan fits right in with books of the time, from the Harrad Experiment to Stranger in a Strange Land.

    As the story moves from Crystal to Arby, a different perspective emerges, as the reader learns Arby’s place in the post-9/11 world right along with him. Arby discovers his expected role at a compelling pace, as there are forces beyond his understanding searching for him – on both sides of the cosmic balance that human shorthand calls ‘good’ and ‘evil’.

    The scope of Arby’s story, diving deeply into that longest of long-running battles, with avatars fighting on both sides of the divide, will remind readers of both Good Omens and American Gods.

    Earthly Vessels is both a deep exploration of the philosophy of the cosmos and a compelling thriller in one breathless story.

    Arby is a protagonist readers can easily empathize with, an Everyman who rises to an occasion he never dreamed was possible, doing his damnedest along a path he doesn’t fully understand.

    This story will keep readers turning pages as fast as they can, from the first until the surprising, fitting, and delightful last.

  • The CONSCIOUS VIRUS: An Aedgar Wisdom novel by Miki Mitayn – Native American Literature, Metaphysical & Visionary Fiction, Magic Realism Fiction

    The CONSCIOUS VIRUS: An Aedgar Wisdom novel by Miki Mitayn – Native American Literature, Metaphysical & Visionary Fiction, Magic Realism Fiction

    Dr. Nerida Green travels across Australia, tending to struggling communities and connecting with her wife Mari – as well as the three spirits who Mari channels through her body, in Miki Mitayn’s climate-fiction novel The Conscious Virus: An Aedgar Wisdom Novel.

    Nerida works sporadic jobs as a doctor, from the mining community of Newman to the small town of Fitzroy Crossing, and back east to a disappointing stint at a naturopathy clinic in Byron Bay. Between her working hours, Nerida speaks with M’Hoq Toq, the Native American medicine man, Bartgrinn the Celtic druid, and Aedgar, an ancient being of the Earth. Nerida asks the spirits for their opinions on topics as broad as climate change and as narrow as her personal matters, engaging them in deep conversation.

    While Nerida and Mari travel, the Coronavirus makes its appearance on the world stage, and shortly after that, Australia. Nerida manages to find them a safe place to live through quarantine, but her role as a doctor weighs heavily on her as the pandemic picks up steam. She turns to the advice of her ephemeral friends, who at once soothe her heart and spark her worries.

    The Conscious Virus tackles current global issues, both through Nerida’s personal experience and the wisdom of the spirits.

    Climate Change hurts the vulnerable people whom Nerida cares for, and as the spirits tell her, disrupts the natural systems and energies of the planet. Covid-19 spreads amongst people who are profoundly unprepared for a pandemic, while the entities try to communicate the metaphysical nature of the pandemic.

    All three spirits have distinct voices, filling their conversations with personality and the unique word-choice of people who haven’t walked the Earth in centuries. Their beliefs mesh with Nerida’s as often as they clash. She connects with them through their philosophy and deep thoughts on the world, but she struggles to understand their often very unscientific perspectives. How much of what they say is metaphorical, and how much is literal? Will Nerida side with the wisdom of the spirits or with the research and knowledge of her peers?

    Between Nerida’s lengthy conversations with the spirits, she and Mari experience the beauty and difficulties of the material world. Mitayn paints Australia with beautiful descriptions, full of color and heat and smells. The world becomes tangible as Nerida walks and drives through it. Her life with Mari is a grounded and realistic one, concerned with whether the air conditioning will keep working, how they’re going to find a place to stay along their travels, and how they should treat each other to maintain a relationship of love and respect. They meet and reconnect with many interesting people, creating a collection of vignettes across their journey.

    This story explores many facets of the modern world and its struggles.

    The lives and work of Aboriginal people often take center stage, as Nerida – an Aboriginal woman herself – understands the unique challenges they face. Nerida, Mari, and the spirits tell an engaging and deeply thoughtful story about LGBT+ identity, racist systems, and how entire groups of people are pushed down by the interests of the rich and powerful. Mitayn takes none of these issues lightly but instead gives them the time and consideration that they deserve.

    Jumping between past, present, and future, The Conscious Virus creates not just a compelling image of the modern world – but also of how the future might play out depending on whether people face their trials with wisdom and compassion – or something so pointless as greed.

     

    5 Star Best Book Chanticleer Reviews round silver sticker

  • A HAND of VENGEANCE (Call of Vengeance Book 4) by John Stafford – Occult Fiction, Espionage Thriller, Metaphysical Fiction

    A HAND of VENGEANCE (Call of Vengeance Book 4) by John Stafford – Occult Fiction, Espionage Thriller, Metaphysical Fiction

     

    In A Hand of Vengeance, the fourth volume in John Stafford’s Vengeance series, the Darkness stops at nothing to destroy Brady, the boy who can call the angels, and continue its never-ending war against The Holy Mother and Her forces of good on earth.

    More of an action novel and less of a polemic than previous novels in the series (A Prayer of Vengeance – Book 1, A Sword of Vengeance – Book 2, and A Song of Vengeance – Book 3) the book begins in 1983 with the intended assassination of Pope John II by four girl assassins trained by Gudren Himmler, daughter of Nazi leader Heinrich Himmler, introduced in the previous book and an actual historical figure. Without intervention, the nefarious plan might just succeed.

    The Darkness is just getting started, including the murder of Mother Theresa in India come to fruition. Fans of the series will find the fates of key figures of great interest include Brady’s grandfather, Giovanni, the Vatican’s Father Anthony, and Brady’s young daughter Grace, whose special powers become increasingly crucial to the saga. Equally riveting revelations include how the forces of Good influenced global decisions and influenced cultural icons, including the Rolling Stones’ “Sympathy for the Devil” and J.R.R. Tolkien’s “Lord of the Rings” trilogy.

    Evil moves on to assassinations.

    Among the more chilling developments, a facility in India tortures innocent orphan girls. The workers extract the girls’ blood at the peak of their terror to produce a human blood-based “fountain of youth” elixir consumed by rich and powerful people worldwide. Dining on the flesh of young children is also a featured meal for Darkness followers.

    With time, 20-something Brady leads the worldwide fight against the Darkness, with the Vatican and several nations backing his efforts. The latest mission ll takes them to London to interrogate Gudrun Margarete Elfriede Emma Anna Burwitz’s (a.k.a. Gudrun Himmler’s) right-hand man. Then the team travels to Paris, where they destroy a chateau where trafficked children died in front of audiences for their “elixir.” One more battle between the Light and Darkness emerges in Calcutta, India, but this one does not leave the forces of Good untouched. The consequences are monumental, the loss of lives for the Light inconsolable. This time, Brady and the Light will not save everyone, but a new family emerges with Brady’s powers to carry on the war against evil.

    Stafford weaves historical events into his storytelling.

    While alternate history plays a role in every Vengeance book, this latest book sees events from the assassination attempt on President Reagan to the near-fatal bombing of Margaret Thatcher as chess pieces in the war of the Darkness against the Light. While reading previous novels would offer a greater understanding of the events in this book, readers who come across this stand-alone novel and crave militant Catholic occult fiction will find it a good read all on its own.

     

    5 Star Best Book Chanticleer Reviews round silver sticker