Eirwen

Eirwen
Author: Jesikah Sundin
Publisher: Forest Tales Publishing
Total Pages: 230
Release: 2022-01-12
Genre: Young Adult Fiction
ISBN: 1954694008

Hidden in the Dwarven mine camps since infancy, an Elven princess with a heart of stone finds herself at the center of an uprising. She must choose between the kingdom she was destined to save or the prince who wakes her heart to life. Release date: TBD (will happen sooner than pre-order date)

Eirwen and the Gossamer Rainbow

Eirwen and the Gossamer Rainbow
Author: Pearl Denham
Publisher: Troubador Publishing Ltd
Total Pages: 144
Release: 2018-01-30
Genre: Juvenile Fiction
ISBN: 1788037871

“As the light caught its tunic making it shine and shimmer like butterfly wings it made her shudder. In spite of the beauty of the clothes it was ugly. The back of its bulging head and long fingered hands were the same sickly non-shade. No fur, no feathers and no colour. He was Casuista.” This is an unearthly tale about an unusual girl called Eirwen. She is 50cm tall with green skin, blue hair and golden eyes. There are many questions to be answered: she was born on another planet, so why is she living on Earth and being protected by her two brothers, Gwyn and Tomos– and why are those brothers snow geese? The monster of a creature, Casuista, is also from another planet: what does he want on Earth and why are animals disappearing or losing their colours? Their protectors, the Learned Ravens, are unable to help so can Eirwen? When Gwyn is also snatched Eirwen begins her dangerous journey to find and rescue the prisoners in the process discovering new inner strengths and passions. Eirwen and the Gossamer Rainbow is a wonderfully magical adventure set in a time neutral fantasy. Suitable for children aged 8-12-years but can be enjoyed by all age groups. It is the first book in the Nereid trilogy. (Victoria Milne Novelist and Editor)

Saving Grace

Saving Grace
Author: W. R. Jones
Publisher: Fontana Press
Total Pages: 258
Release: 1987
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 9780006173908

Changing Times

Changing Times
Author: Deirdre Beddoe
Publisher:
Total Pages: 316
Release: 2003
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN:

Documenting the experiences of women in the 1950s,and 1960s by presenting their own autobiographical,accounts, Changing Times features sections on a,range of issues from childhood and chappel to,unmarried mothers and the swinging sixties. The,detailed introduction sets the accounts in,context, illuminating the significance of women's,lives during such changing times. This is the,third in the autobiographical series following the,popular Parachutes and Petticoats and Struggle and,Starve.

British Samplers

British Samplers
Author: Mary Eirwen Jones
Publisher: Trafalgar Square Publishing
Total Pages: 98
Release: 1948
Genre: Samplers
ISBN:

The Withered Root

The Withered Root
Author: Rhys Davies
Publisher: Library of Wales
Total Pages: 372
Release: 2007
Genre: Fiction
ISBN:

"The Withered Root is the story of the last great Welsh revival - a religious thrust of feeling - chapels and coal mines, righteous fervour and fertile, febrile carousal which swept across Wales in the year of the Lord 1904. The Revival is led by the young charismatic Reuben Daniel, a Welsh speaking collier-preacher. He is a young man full of life and its desires but still unsure of its meaning. Reuben is absorbed - driven - to expound the gospel and seek out the devil, wherever or whoever that may be, in his quest for conversion. He progresses from the village pulpit at the head of a small band of followers called The Corinthians, to Valley's saviour and beyond in a few hectic months of sermons, pilgrimage and passion. But in the new world of salvation there is conflict between the physical and the spiritual as Reuben's odyssey becomes a test for his mind, body and soul." --Book Jacket.

The Forum

The Forum
Author:
Publisher:
Total Pages: 708
Release: 1928
Genre: United States
ISBN:

The Torrent

The Torrent
Author: Joseph W. Abruquah
Publisher:
Total Pages: 298
Release: 1968
Genre: Ghana
ISBN:

"The Torrent portrays a boy growing up in Ghana in a period of accelerated social change. Its main theme is the subtle influence of an education imposed from outside - in this case on Josiah Afful as he progresses from a village school to the heart of the assimilation process, a grammar school run by British Missionaries; from the shelter of a family background to the problems common to adolescence, in school, sex and personal relationships. Through his descriptions of Josiah and his schooling, the author is able to offer insights into the wider conflicts inherent in his situation: between Africans and Europeans, the ancestral and the alien, between African teachers highly and barely qualified, between old and new. Honestly and sensitively written, this is a novel of unusual complexity and interest."--Book cover.