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E.D. DeBirmingham

    E. D. de Birmingham puise dans une riche expérience englobant le théâtre, le monachisme bouddhiste et l'enseignement équestre pour créer sa voix littéraire unique. Son premier roman en solo, Siege Perilous, est issu de cette tapisserie d'expériences distinctives, faisant suite à ses contributions à la trilogie The Mongoliad. L'œuvre de Birmingham se caractérise par une exploration réfléchie de la condition humaine, offrant aux lecteurs des récits à la fois intellectuellement stimulants et émotionnellement résonnants. Elle aborde son écriture avec une grâce stylistique qui rend sa prose captivante.

    The Mongoliad. Book.1
    Siege Perilous
    • Siege Perilous

      • 408pages
      • 15 heures de lecture
      3,6(141)Évaluer

      Ocyrhoe, a young, cunning fugitive from Rome, safeguards a chalice of subtle but great power. Finding herself in France, she allies with the persecuted, pacifist Cathar sect in their legendary mountaintop stronghold, Montségur. There she resists agents of the Roman Church and its Inquisition, fights off escalating, bloody besiegement by troops of the King of France, and shields the mysterious cup from the designs of many.Percival, the heroic Shield-Brethren knight from The Mongoliad, consumed by his mystical visions of the Holy Grail, is also drawn to Montségur—where the chalice holds the key to his destiny.Arrayed against Percival and Ocyrhoe are enemies both old and new who are determined to reveal the secrets of the Shield-Brethren with the hope of destroying the order once and for all.Alive with memorable characters, intense with action and intrigue, Siege Perilous conjures a medieval world where the forces of faith confront the forces of fear. Choices made by characters in The Mongoliad reach their ultimate conclusion in this fifth and concluding novel—and all of Christendom is at stake.

      Siege Perilous
    • The Mongoliad. Book.1

      • 442pages
      • 16 heures de lecture
      3,5(500)Évaluer

      In 1241, warriors try to stop the Mongols from invading Europe; in the nineteenth century, a group of martial artists provide a language expert with lost manuscripts to translate that chronicle their ancestors' thirteenth century battles.

      The Mongoliad. Book.1