Join us on a literary world trip!
Add this book to bookshelf
Grey
Write a new comment Default profile 50px
Grey
Subscribe to read the full book or read the first pages for free!
All characters reduced
Water Folk - cover

Water Folk

John Hood

Publisher: Defiance Press and Publishing

  • 0
  • 0
  • 0

Summary

In the sprawling wilderness of 19th-century America, an invisible war rages beneath the surface of history. "Water Folk," the captivating third installment of John Hood's Folklore Cycle, weaves together the fates of humans and supernatural beings across decades of American expansion.
 
When famous author Washington Irving encounters a mysterious Water Maiden named Dela, he's drawn into a hidden world of magical Folk and monstrous creatures that have shaped America's frontier since its founding. As the Folk nations struggle against each other for dominance, humans like Sam Houston, Manuel Chaves, and the legendary Captain Stormalong find themselves unwittingly entangled in ancient conflicts that will determine the future of both worlds.
 
From the battlefields of the Creek War to the Texas Revolution, from the gold-rush shores of California to the halls of power in Washington D.C., "Water Folk" masterfully blends historical events with magical intrigue. Hood's richly imagined America is populated by shape-shifters, fairy rangers, and forgotten monsters—beings that have influenced human affairs while remaining just beyond our perception.
 
When the Water Maiden Dela is captured by a power-hungry Elf prince, her lover Goran and their allies must embark on a desperate quest to rescue her. But in doing so, they uncover a terrifying secret that could destroy the delicate balance between human and Folk worlds forever.
 
If you enjoyed "American Gods," "The Golem and the Jinni," and "Jonathan Strange & Mr. Norrell," you'll love "Water Folk."
Available since: 12/10/2024.
Print length: 442 pages.

Other books that might interest you

  • The Moneylenders of Shahpur - cover

    The Moneylenders of Shahpur

    Helen Forrester

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    Timeless romance from the best-selling author of Tuppence to Cross the Mersey. With over 3 million copies sold around the world, Helen Forrester’s hard-hitting and gripping fiction continues to move readers. 
    Anasuyabehn was brought up to obey her father in all things. She didn’t question this until she set eyes on Tilak, the brilliant new professor at Shahpur University. 
    Promised to Mahadev, a wealthy moneylender, Anasuyabehn is not free to pursue Tilak — a man from a different culture who shocks her community with his unfamiliar, modern ideas. 
    Torn between a passionate love for Tilak and her deep religious beliefs pushing her towards Mahadev, Anasuyabehn only wants to follow her heart. 
    What she does not realise is that she is not the only one with a stake in this — and neither of the two men will give up easily. 
    Helen Forrester's The Moneylenders of Shahpur is a timeless, top-class historical saga that delves into the complexities of love, duty, and societal expectations. Anasuyabehn's struggle between her heart and her obligations continues to move readers around the world. 
    For fans of Katie Flynn (The Winter Runaway), Maureen Lee (The Kelly Sisters), Pam Howes (Secrets on Mersey Square), Anna Jacobs (The Secrets of Eastby End), and Rosie Goodwin (Yesterday's Shadows). 
    HarperCollins 2022
    Show book
  • January 1941: - News Fashion & Homefront - cover

    January 1941: - News Fashion &...

    Nick Seider

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    Hello, my name is Nick Seider, and I am the creator of Green Valley Radio, an emulated radio experience that takes you back and time and tunes you in to the news, music, and culture of the past.  
    In this audio book series, we share our original news, fashion, & Homefront pieces that give you a taste of what the world was like in January 1941 from the perspective of a fictional town called Green Valley. In our first broadcast, January 1941, you will meet three of our key characters in this fictionalized exploration of the past. One of those characters is Catalina Jack, who runs the Green Valley Radio station, and covers domestic news. Then there is Hannah Bourbon, fashion correspondent full of ambition & full of accessories. Finally, in this first broadcast we also meet Walter Klondike, who serves as the World News correspondent and is a veteran of the Spanish Civil War.  
    In this series of audio books, these characters (and many others along the way) will give you a glimpse into the past, and take you on a journey through time.  
    Catalina Jack is voiced by Nick Seider. 
    Hannah Bourbon is voiced by Hannah Marks. 
    Walter Klondike is voiced by Garrett Fritz.  
    I hope you find some enjoy this series!
    Show book
  • Forgotten Authors The - Volume 8 - S Mukerji to Eça de Queirós - cover

    Forgotten Authors The - Volume 8...

    Catherine Wells

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    Throughout the long centuries of human history is the want, and the need, to share information, to exchange ideas and for that knowledge and experience, for curiosity and learning, to be the basis of a civil society. 
    In literature the ambition is much narrower.  In order to be known, to be popular, you had to be published.  And for that people had to know you existed and your ideas worth reading.  Obviously for most of humanity’s time people couldn’t read and texts couldn’t be published in any great number. 
    In the 15th Century Gutenberg’s printing press began the revolution to address the second and by the 19th century had gathered pace with startling speed and mass distribution.  Education for the many was brought in to help people understand more of their world and, with new skills, how to have a better place within it.  Now, if the powers that owned the presses and means of distribution agreed an audience would now be able to avail themselves of your ideas, your printed words.  
    Sadly, in the thirst for the new, the recent and the past fell from sight, relegated to dark corners and dusty shelves.   
    But the printed word is rarely without someone, somewhere busying themselves through piles of papers and books rediscovering what a good story is, whatever its age. 
    Sadly, in the thirst for the new, the recent and the past fell from sight, relegated to dark corners and dusty shelves.    
    But the printed word is rarely without someone, somewhere busying themselves through piles of papers and books rediscovering what a good story is, whatever its age. 
    In this volume we offer up a small selection of those talents whose time has now come again.
    Show book
  • Inner Paths to Outer Space - cover

    Inner Paths to Outer Space

    Rick Strassman, Luis Eduardo...

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    This audiobook is a collective exploration of a bold idea: that the worlds accessed in visionary states—especially those triggered by psychedelics like DMT, ayahuasca and psilocybin—may be genuine “spaces” of experience that tell us something real about consciousness and, possibly, about other forms of life or intelligence. Rather than treating psychedelic visions as mere hallucinations, the authors argue that these inner journeys can function as “inner paths” toward what we usually think of as “outer space”: other dimensions, other minds, and other layers of reality.
    Show book
  • The Mouthless - A tale from the French symbolist writer known mainly to be the primary influence on Jorge Luis Borges - cover

    The Mouthless - A tale from the...

    Marcel Schwob

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    Mayer André Marcel Schwob was born in Chaville, Hauts-de-Seine, France on 23rd August 1867 into a cultivated Jewish family.  
     
    As a child he devoured the works of Poe and Stevenson in French and then again in English.  His attachment to the bizarre and dark was already forming. 
     
    His education at the Lycée of Nantes earned him the 1st Prize for Excellence.  In 1881, he was in Paris with his maternal uncle to study at the Lycée Louis-le-Grand.  Schwob quickly developed his multilingual abilities and then studied philology and Sanscrit at the École pratique des hautes études before completing his military service in Vannes with the artillery. 
     
    After completing a Bachelor of Arts in 1888 he became a professional journalist and worked for the Phare de la Loire, the Événement and L'Écho de Paris. 
     
    The 1890’s marked his establishment as a brilliant writer with the publication of six short story collections.   
     
    He fell ill in 1896 with a chronic, incurable intestinal disorder.  He also suffered recurring bouts of influenza and pneumonia.  Intestinal surgery was given several times, at first with success but, by 1900, after two more surgeries, he was told that nothing more could be done for him.  Schwob now existed on kefir and fermented milk. 
     
    By the turn of the century, despite failing health, and often too ill to write, he embarked on several long travels, including to Vailima in the South Pacific where his literary hero Stevenson had died.  
     
    Schwob was regarded as a symbolist writer and a ‘precursor of Surrealism’.  He wrote over a hundred short stories, journalistic articles, essays, biographies, literary reviews and analysis, translations and plays.  
     
    Marcel Schwob died on 26th February 1905 of Pneumonia.  He was 37.
    Show book
  • Saving a Scoundrel - cover

    Saving a Scoundrel

    Karla Kratovil

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    The death of a friend leads the cautious Eleanor Spencer to reevaluate her life. In a rare impulse, she kisses the man of her dreams—her best friend's older brother. The moment of madness gives her courage to take more chances. This spring, she will finally travel to London for the social season. All she needs is to compile a list of adventures to complete. At the top of her list? Kiss Lucius Grisham again . . . 
     
     
     
    Barely surviving since his father severed his funds, Lucius Grisham works two respectable jobs, and one decidedly disreputable job, just to keep up critical appearances. When Ellie becomes the target of a sordid bet made by his rakehell friends, Lucius must step in to protect his sister's friend. As he finds himself pulled into helping Ellie with her list of adventures, he is surprised to find his jaded heart tempted by the innocent beauty. But Ellie Spencer is far too good for a scoundrel like him. 
     
     
     
    Ellie will endanger both her heart and her virtue to make Lucius hers. Can Lucius become the man Ellie believes him to be? 
     
     
     
    Contains mature themes.
    Show book