Graynelore
4/5
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About this ebook
Rogrig Wishard is a killer, a liar and a thief.
Rogrig is the last person the fey would turn to for help. But they know something he doesn’t.
In a world without government or law, where a man’s loyalty is to his family and faerie tales are strictly for children, Rogrig is not happy to discover that he’s carrying faerie blood. Especially when he starts to see them wherever he goes.
To get his life back, he’s going to have to journey further from home than he’s ever been before and find out what the fey could possibly want from him. But that’s easier said than done when the punishment for abandoning your family is death.
Stephen Moore
Stephen Moore has been a published author since the mid 1990’s, having already written several acclaimed, and well received fantasy books for older children and young adults. His first fantasy novel for grown-ups, Graynelore, published in 2015.
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Reviews for Graynelore
2 ratings1 review
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5This vaguely belongs in fantasy, though much of what happens that's fantastical could almost be dismissed as wishful thinking.Rogrig Wishard belongs to a tribe who are continuously fighting and raiding with their neighbours, divided within but united if someone else attacks them. Rogrig is a man of this world until he discovers that he has faerie blood and once he realises that he starts noticing others like him, from different tribes and groups, together they might be able to save faerie.Overall it reads like the author is using names like Troll etc to make it sound like these were names that later eras added magic. Look at the poor primitive people explain natural stuff and laugh, which does rankle a bit. I prefer where authors accept the worldview of people and move on. Then suddenly magic works but it's not a good flow and I didn't really get the people involved, they were more sketches than fully people. I'm not sure that the author was sure if he was writing fantasy or straight historical.Readable, it kept me going but fairly forgetable.