Circle of Stones
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- $9.99
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- $9.99
Publisher Description
Three interwoven, spine-tingling historical thrillers from the New York Times bestselling author of Incarceron.
Suspense, mysticism, and history encircle three separate but related narratives in this fantasy novel. Today, Sulis, a teenage girl with a mysterious past, arrives in Bath with a new identity, trailed by the person she's trying to outrun. In 1740, Zac is apprenticed to an architect obsessed with Druidic mysteries, but has his own secret—and destructive—agenda. In ancient England, a druid king discovers the healing waters of a magical spring, where he founds a great city, and the heart of Fisher’s story. Through each voice, the mysteries are revealed, linking Sulis, Zac, and the king through the circles of time.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Ominous in tone and deliberately paced, Fisher's standalone fantasy (published as Crown of Acorns in the U.K. in 2010) unfolds across three narrative voices linked by imagery rather than event. There's Sulis, a modern teenager who's been assigned a new identity after years in foster care, hiding from an unidentified man who murdered her playmate. Zac is a debtor's son and architect's apprentice, who loathes his master and pursues a desperate secret agenda in the Georgian era. And briefly, at intervals, there's Bladud, a druid king who runs mad like Lear across the ancient wilderness of southwest England. They're all tied to the city of Bath, whose origin Fisher (Obsidian Mirror) places at the moment when a goddess says to Bladud, "Hold me in a circle of stone." The agency of men and imprisonment of women are at play throughout, even in the narration Sulis is the only character whose story is told for her, in third-person. There's a romance of sorts and elements of a thriller, but Fisher's real interest is in resonance, as images and patterns of relationship come under scrutiny through each narrative lens. Ages 12 up.