Storm Frost

Fiction & Literature
Cover of the book Storm Frost by P. M. Sabin Moore, AuthorHouse UK
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Author: P. M. Sabin Moore ISBN: 9781467890724
Publisher: AuthorHouse UK Publication: March 27, 2009
Imprint: AuthorHouse UK Language: English
Author: P. M. Sabin Moore
ISBN: 9781467890724
Publisher: AuthorHouse UK
Publication: March 27, 2009
Imprint: AuthorHouse UK
Language: English

There exists an Anglo-Saxon manuscript, where we hear of an outcast wife, a husband, his messenger, a lover and a baby. Merge these tales with what we know of the royal family buried at Sutton Hoo in East Anglia, including  Raedwald and his brother, Eni, living at the end of the 6th century AD.

They believe in the old gods, like Woden, and have not yet encountered Christianity. Their culture is vibrant, exciting, terrifying in its cruelty, and uninhibited in its morality.

Travel from the East Anglian fenlands, over northern moors to the remote Northumbrian river where the story reaches its climax. Along the way, discover life in a royal hall or a hovel; cure wounds or inflict them; share a  feast or scrape a meal; work fertility charms or protect your folk from evil.

Here is a tale of love and betrayal, courage and fear. Niartha, the fictional heroine, outcast from her people, encounters hardship, abuse and loss as she seeks her exiled lover; her survival depends on her practical skills, unexpected in a king’s daughter.

In their desires and social lives, Anglo-Saxons, although separated from us by fourteen hundred years, are not so very alien, after all.

           

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

There exists an Anglo-Saxon manuscript, where we hear of an outcast wife, a husband, his messenger, a lover and a baby. Merge these tales with what we know of the royal family buried at Sutton Hoo in East Anglia, including  Raedwald and his brother, Eni, living at the end of the 6th century AD.

They believe in the old gods, like Woden, and have not yet encountered Christianity. Their culture is vibrant, exciting, terrifying in its cruelty, and uninhibited in its morality.

Travel from the East Anglian fenlands, over northern moors to the remote Northumbrian river where the story reaches its climax. Along the way, discover life in a royal hall or a hovel; cure wounds or inflict them; share a  feast or scrape a meal; work fertility charms or protect your folk from evil.

Here is a tale of love and betrayal, courage and fear. Niartha, the fictional heroine, outcast from her people, encounters hardship, abuse and loss as she seeks her exiled lover; her survival depends on her practical skills, unexpected in a king’s daughter.

In their desires and social lives, Anglo-Saxons, although separated from us by fourteen hundred years, are not so very alien, after all.

           

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