Buy TODAY using the link below:
www.amazon.com/dp/B00FTJYL48
Imagine you’re a young boy of thirteen, you’ve just become a teenager but bigger pressures arrive in your life when you find out that you’re part-elf, and that part belongs to another world, a world where elves are maligned and marginalized and a sinister grasp has taken hold of the populace in their place. You’ve been given the tools to save this world; told the truth of the elves and tasked to restore their good name. Great; how on earth are you going to do that? Not on Earth at all.
Saturday, October 12, 2013
Wednesday, October 9, 2013
3 days til ELVAN DAY!!!
How many days until Elvan: The Legacy of Thaer drops on AMAZON for KINDLE? 3!!!! Set your calendars readers, tell your friends!!! This is EPIC!
Watch the TRAILER, SHARE the Trailer!
Saturday, October 5, 2013
Enhanced Description - this is what you'll see on Amazon.
Julian Thatcher’s life is about to get seriously elfed up.
On his thirteenth birthday, Julian’s godfather shows up to his party and surprises him with unusual gifts in the form of a bow and a quiver. He calls him a “special young man” and tells him he has a “destiny beyond your wildest dreams.” According to his godfather, Julian is part elf, a special hybrid that is the only of his kind; and his kind comes from another world called Thaer. What’s more, his destiny is to unify the race of elves––driven apart by political scandal into different factions, all in hiding, trusting none but their own––and restore their honor in time to stop the resurgence of an old evil threatening to plunge Thaer into a dystopia.
Julian doesn’t believe any of this until an extraordinary event forces him to turn to his godfather for answers; answers that come in the form of more unusual gifts––a book and a necklace. The book tells him of his astonishing origins and the necklace transports him to Thaer; where he embarks on a difficult and dangerous mission. He meets a mysterious ally; joins a clan of elves; faces a goal too high, too harsh; and battles an immovable force to fulfill his destiny and become Elvan, the Legacy of Thaer. Along the way Julian discovers that when you leave behind the life you’ve always known, to save a world you never knew existed, things do not go as planned.
This is the beginning.
Tuesday, October 1, 2013
Sunday, September 22, 2013
Trailer in production
Artwork, check.
Background music, check.
Voiceover, check.
Get ready for the Elvan: The Legacy of Thaer book trailer!!!!!!
Background music, check.
Voiceover, check.
Get ready for the Elvan: The Legacy of Thaer book trailer!!!!!!
Saturday, August 24, 2013
Julian Thatcher’s world is about to get seriously elfed up!
Elvan: The Legacy of Thaer is the first book in a fantasy series that follows the growth and progression of a young boy who must leave behind the life he’s always known to save a world he never knew existed. Along the way he must come to terms with his identity as an Elvan - the only of his kind - and unify the race of elves who have been torn apart by political scandal and driven into several different factions, all in hiding, who trust none but their own.
I think of the Elvan series as something akin to Harry Potter with elements of Lord of the Rings. The Legacy of Thaer is a coming-of-age quest that offers adventure and drama, suspense and humor, romantic tension, political intrigue, and an ending you would never expect that profoundly sets the stage for the follow-up books. As I count down to Saturday, September 21st (LAUNCH DAY ON AMAZON KINDLE), I invite you to read the offering of the first chapter (and previous posts), read a bit about me, subscribe for updates, and mark your calendars to be among the first to purchase a copy on ELVAN DAY! (9/21/13, 9/21/13, 9/21/13, 9/21/13!!!!!)
Look out for the Book Trailer, debuting within the week of 8/26 - COMING SOON!
I think of the Elvan series as something akin to Harry Potter with elements of Lord of the Rings. The Legacy of Thaer is a coming-of-age quest that offers adventure and drama, suspense and humor, romantic tension, political intrigue, and an ending you would never expect that profoundly sets the stage for the follow-up books. As I count down to Saturday, September 21st (LAUNCH DAY ON AMAZON KINDLE), I invite you to read the offering of the first chapter (and previous posts), read a bit about me, subscribe for updates, and mark your calendars to be among the first to purchase a copy on ELVAN DAY! (9/21/13, 9/21/13, 9/21/13, 9/21/13!!!!!)
Look out for the Book Trailer, debuting within the week of 8/26 - COMING SOON!
Elvan: The Legacy of Thaer, Chapter 1 - Due Time
“Is he conscious?”
The voice was calm and even with the slightest hint
of menace.
“Yes, my lord, the healers have brought him back to
a… suitable health, as you’ve ordered. Do you think he’ll break this time, my lord?” The servant was careful to add
that last honorific lest his question seem too forward for his station.
“I think a great many things…” he replied, trailing
off in thought. The servant imagined his master pondering clever ways to kill
him. Those eerie eyes alone made his heart skip a beat, and now they were fixed
on him. How the servant hated those eyes! He tried to look away, to find some
excuse, but he knew that his master had little patience for cowards – or at
least those fool enough to let it show. He held his composure and waited.
The master smiled. “What I think about should not
concern you, but you already know that don’t you?”
A shudder ran up the servant’s spine and he trembled
ever so slightly, silently cursing himself as he answered. “My lord, I––”
The master held up a hand and the servant almost bit
his lip in his attempt to close his mouth as fast as possible.
“Focus,” The master chided. “Tell the healers to
leave, and the guards. I will deal with the prisoner myself. Concern yourself
with your duties not what I think. Go. Now.”
The servant needed no further prompting. He hated
being in a room with his master by himself and the practiced nerve he managed
to muster was far from perfect. Hurrying out of the room, he struggled mightily
to keep his brisk pace from turning into a full blown jog.
The master sat alone in silence for a time, his eyes
closed in meditation, summoning his will for the task at hand. Then he rose,
crossed to the other side of the room and withdrew a curious item from a
cupboard: a barbed crown. Various lengths of wire protruded from around its rim
with each end capped off by a sharp hook. Knotted rope connected a jewel in the
center of the crown to a leather headband. A few inches away from the headband,
along the rope, was a triangular metal fitting equipped with finger grooves –
this was the channeler.
The master would get answers with this, his Angarr.
Its maiden use would prove very painful indeed and he almost smiled thinking of
how it would perform up to his dark design. As it was, the prisoner was costing
him too much time. It was a clear understanding of timing that enabled his
ascent, but his final goals were still too far out of reach. So he set a grim
face and proceeded out of his quarters, down the hall, down the spiraling stairs
leading to the lowest chambers of the compound. There, where the most
unspeakable things were done, he saw the guards melt away at his approach,
heeding the order to retreat from the area on his arrival. As they passed him,
and he them, they might as well not have been there for his singular focus. He
reached the wrought-iron door, pulled back the deadbolt and entered, locking it
behind him with the only key made for the purpose of keeping people out.
The master walked over to the prisoner and surveyed
the stirring form. He was gaunt and shabby, but a sharp smack to the face
brought him wide-awake. Defiance shone in the prisoner’s eyes. For a moment the
two looked at each other – prisoner and captor – without saying a single word.
It was understood: the prisoner would not break and the captor was sure the
time had come. The master revealed his new tool.
“You will find tonight that you are not as great as
you think, not the only one capable of truly amazing things. I call this
Angarr. It’s like a crown; I thought you’d like that. Here, try it on.”
Bound as he was to the wall, the prisoner could not
very well try it on. The master smiled facetiously and placed the crown on his
prisoner’s head. Methodically, mercilessly, he pierced the Angarr’s hooks into
the key areas of his prisoner’s neck and chest. The prisoner barely flinched,
resolute in his defiance. Finally the master placed the leather headband on his
own head and sat cross-legged across from the prisoner. He placed his fingers
in the grooves of the channeler and closed his eyes. The prisoner said his
first words.
“This will not work. I’ll die before I allow you to
win.”
The voice was low and weak but confident.
The master opened his eyes, looking straight at the
prisoner with his peculiarly colored eyes that so scared those under him. “Yes,
you will die, but not yet, my friend, not yet. There are many more left to die
before you.”
The master closed his eyes again and began a low hum
that became a steady chant. When he re-opened his eyes they shone bright in
their irregular colors. A purplish light emanated from all around his person in
unsteady waves before being focused along the length of rope toward the
prisoner.
The prisoner winced, for the pain was incredible.
The chanting became faster and steadily louder. The waves of light lanced into
him through the hooks but he held himself in check, though he began to feel the
intrusion into his mind.
Then the chanting reached a crescendo and the
prisoner, in spite of himself, began to scream––it was impossible to tell
whether defiance or pain was the source. It sounded terrible. But to his
captor, it was most beautiful.
Earth
David screamed into the phone. “It’s a boy, it’s a
boy!”
Well of course it was a boy! As long as Alistaire had known the
Thatchers they always had boys; a fact that none of them seemed to question.
Rather, the Thatchers accepted the occurrence as ‘just the way the Thatcher
bloodline ran.’ Alistaire knew better.
Alistaire was once told to take note of the pattern. Although he found
it hard to believe at first, Alistaire had come to accept it as part of the
secret that was passed down to him by his father – and to his father from his
grandfather before that. His family, the Spencers, had observed the Thatcher
pattern early. Among the various other things they taught him and passed on in
their roles as Vigils, things that regularly scouted the lines of what was
ordinary, it was the pattern of a male Thatcher bloodline that stuck out the
most.
Alistaire knew why, of course. When Alistaire was young, he often
wondered why the role of Vigil was only passed onto the first-born sons, as
opposed to daughters and younger sons; there were enough of each in his
bloodline after all. He wished he could share the burden with the rest of his
kin. As time wore on and the complexity of his duties took its toll he
concluded that maybe it was better that way. The responsibility, the insanity
of it all… who would want that? He didn’t. But he accepted it and had hoped for
the day when it would all make some sense. Today was that day. He would see
this secret, this legend, come true once and for all. If not, he would begin to
enter his twilight years with little more than the nagging doubt that
ultimately killed his father. But today was the day!
Determined and excited, Alistaire said a quick goodbye and disconnected
the call. He grabbed his keys, pulled on a sweater and headed for the door. But
not before consulting his father’s book one more time. The fantastical nature
of the book was enough for him to sprint to his car with the energy of a man
half his age and drive faster than he had ever dared. He hoped it was towards a
destiny he could finally share.
Speeding the entire way, Alistaire almost crashed as he pulled into the
hospital parking lot and he knew a ticket was almost certain to come in the
mail. He decided he didn’t care, not if the boy––
“Oi! Sean Connery! You’re not James Bond anymore!”
Jarred from his thoughts, Alistaire located the direction of the taunt
to a trio of teenagers idling in the lot as he hurried from the car. They
looked at him as if he shouldn’t have been able to drive that fast. They didn’t
think he could run that fast either. Still, he was panting when he reached the
front desk and could only sputter his request.
“Th-Th-Thatcher, what room? Quickly now! The ones with the baby!”
The attendant scowled; annoyance plain on her face. She glanced down
and typed in the name.
“Room 314… Hey wait!”
Before she could finish shouting to him where the elevators were,
Alistaire was off and running up the stairs.
306, 310, 312, the numbers whizzed by and he burst into the room almost
colliding with David before coming to a stop. David was beaming and didn’t seem
the least bit surprised. “It’s a boy!!” he shouted and flung himself into
Alistaire. He allowed himself to be swept around by David’s exuberance – he
could barely contain himself either. He looked around and noticed that he was
the only one there besides David and Melinda – their respective families hadn’t
arrived yet.
His gaze fell on Melinda. She hadn’t uttered a word since he came into
the room, her attention focused only on the baby in her arms. As he approached,
un-entangling himself from David, she looked up and smiled.
“Alistaire” Her voice was soft and radiated a warmth that always made
him feel at ease. He felt a little awkward but leaned over to get a better look
at the infant. “Do you want to hold him?” He gulped and almost choked.
“C’mon man, it’s not the first baby you’ve been around!” David said
excitedly, “You were there when I was born!”
It was true: Alistaire’s family, the Spencers, had had a long
association with David’s family. The Spencers had been close to the Thatchers
for decades but the Thatchers did not know there was a deeper reason beyond
friendship. Alistaire had, in fact, been there for David’s birth – out of his
friendship with David’s father sure, but more under specific mandate from his
own father to examine the child. Having not seen anything remarkable, Alistaire
resolved to look forward to when David would have his son.
“Uncle Al?”
“Uh, yeah… yes David.”
Alistaire was nervous and he knew it, but he mastered himself and
stretched out his arms.
“Let me have that boy.”
David laughed and Melinda chuckled softly and looked up at Alistaire.
“Be gentle,” she said as she lifted the baby towards him.
Alistaire nodded and took the baby, careful to support the head with
the curve of his arm. He resembled a little caramel loaf of bread, Alistaire
decided, and smiled at the thought. He was the perfect testament of his mixed
parentage: David was white and Melinda was black. However, it was that one
other bit of ancestry that Alistaire was looking for, something beyond the
understanding of his parents.
“He has the ears!”
He almost shouted it out loud and thanked God for the little composure
he had left though he was sure he had quite the silly look on his face. The new
parents didn’t notice and Alistaire was glad for that small mercy. For a long
moment he stopped breathing. After so many generations, here he was, ‘the one
from without.’ The one on whom so much was dependent.
“What will you name him?” he asked not taking his eyes off the baby.
David and Melinda exchanged looks. David spoke up, “We both agree on Julian,
Julian Thatcher.”
“And what will you name him?” asked Melinda. The question was
directed to Alistaire. As David’s wife, Melinda learned of the unique tradition
of having the Spencer family give the Thatcher children their middle names. She
had thought it a bit odd, but had accepted it just as she did the marriage
proposal of David Aryll’un Thatcher. She had joked with him when they
first met calling it the “oddest name she ever heard.”
Alistaire looked at her and smiled, and in a mock dramatic voice
declared: “Julian shall henceforth be known as Julian Vau’n Thatcher!”
The parents looked at each other. Melinda went first.
“That’s not that odd actually… Vau’n”
She said the name slowly as if tasting it. “I like it.”
David’s grin was cartoon wide and he laughed out as much as said, “It
sure as hell beats Aryll’un!”
Everybody laughed long and hard for a good many seconds before
Alistaire cleared his throat and asked, “Where d’you suppose he got the ears
though, David?”
“Hi-Her side of the family,” the jumbled reply came from both parents.
“Definitely Melinda’s folks,
I’ve never seen ears like that in the Thatcher family.” David stated
matter-of-factly.
The two new parents bickered playfully and Alistaire thought to himself,
“If they only knew, little one, if they only knew.” He took a stroll around the
room away from them, holding the infant close, and whispered, “I have my eye on
you Vau’n. One day, when you’re much older, you’re going to have to do
something unimaginable but I’ll be there to help you, to guide you. I promise.
I only ask one thing in return.” Alistaire smiled knowing full well the
implausibility of his request, but he said it anyway: “Hurry up and grow up!”
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