Whiskeyjack
Page 32
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Did you love Whiskeyjack? Then you should read The Bride of the Blue Wind by Victoria Goddard!
What the gods desire, they take.
When the gods take a person, there is not much one can do about it, even if there seems something strange and terrible about the god. Through the gates of the eastern mountains pass only the gods, the dead, and the heroes of legend. Mere mortals do not go farther than the tombs lining the roads of the Middle Desert.
Except for the daughters of the Bandit Queen of the Oclaresh, that is. The lord of the Blue Wind took their youngest sister. When Pali and Arzu discover that there is something gravely wrong, they decide that the gods work through the hands of men, that justice binds everyone—god, man, djinn, or demon—and that they are not afraid of the road east.
Read more at Victoria Goddard’s site.
Also by Victoria Goddard
Greenwing & Dart
Stargazy Pie
Bee Sting Cake
Whiskeyjack
The Sisters Avramapul
The Bride of the Blue Wind
The Warrior of the Third Veil
Watch for more at Victoria Goddard’s site.
About the Author
Victoria Goddard is a fantasy novelist, gardener, and occasional academic. She has a PhD in Medieval Studies from the University of Toronto, has walked down the length of England, and is currently a writer, cheesemonger, and gardener in the Canadian Maritimes. Along with cheese, books, and flowers she also loves dogs, tea, and languages.
Read more at Victoria Goddard’s site.
Table of Contents
Title Page
Copyright Page
Also By Victoria Goddard
Chapter One: An Under-appreciated Genre
Chapter Two: Gaolbreak
Chapter Three: The Trogdolyte Kingdom
Chapter Four: The Hunter in the Green
Chapter Five: The True and Neglected Art of Poacher
Chapter Six: Cutting Counter
Chapter Seven: The Hanging Hill
Chapter Eight: Refuge
Chapter Nine: First Draw
Chapter Ten: Correspondences
Chapter Eleven: The Third Letter
Chapter Twelve: Murder?
Chapter Thirteen: The Embroidery Circle
Chapter Fourteen: Fairy Blood
Chapter Fifteen: The Gift
Chapter Sixteen: Dinner Plans
Chapter Seventeen: Hollow Ways
Chapter Eighteen: The Burglars
Chapter Nineteen: Factors
Chapter Twenty: Introductions
Chapter Twenty-One: Face Cards
Chapter Twenty-Two: Research Questions
Chapter Twenty-Three: Anatomy of a Dragon
Chapter Twenty-Four: Two Sticks and a Stone
Chapter Twenty-Five: The Importance of Being Earnest
Chapter Twenty-Six: Anatomy of a Curse
Chapter Twenty-Seven: Literary Criticism
Chapter Twenty-Eight: Bull, Boar, Stag
Chapter Twenty-Nine: Crimson Lake
Chapter Thirty: Ebraöni
Chapter Thirty-One: Jack-in-the-Box
Chapter Thirty-Two: Complications
Chapter Thirty-Three: The Magarran Strid
Chapter Thirty-Four: The Turning of the Waters
Chapter Thirty-Five: Cut Across
Chapter Thirty-Six: The Emperor Card
Chapter Thirty-Seven: The Last Will and Testament of Benneret Buchance
About the Author
Sign up for Victoria Goddard's Mailing List
Further Reading: The Bride of the Blue Wind
Also By Victoria Goddard
About the Author