Patek Philippe
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The definitive history of the world-renowned watchmakers, Patek Philippe. Founded in Geneva in 1839,...
Thirty-One Nil: On the Road with Football's Outsiders
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Winner of the Football Book of the Year Award, Cross British Sports Book Awards 2015 In a tiny,...
The Last Days of Western Steam from the Bill Reed Collection
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This collection of 168 colour photographs, which date from 1958 to 1967, features the Western Region...
Hide Fox, and All After: What is Concealed in Shakespeares Hamlet?
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Is there anything more to say on this most-discussed of plays? It has become a hive of furious...
Succubus Soul: Veras Academy (Succubus Sirens #3)
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Blessed with the power to protect. A princess born to two worlds. But despite being the star pupil...
Multiple Partner Paranormal Romance Adult
Iced (Fever, #6)
Book
The year is 1 AWC—After the Wall Crash. The Fae are free and hunting us. It’s a war zone out...
urban fantasy fae fever series
You know, the way a lot of fatnsy stories do? Think Luke Skywalker, from the back-planet of Tattoine, or Frodo Baggins from Bagend, to name but two.
Rags to riches, basically.
Anyway, perhaps the key protagonist of this is the keep boy Pug, who, over the course of the story - finds himself a native of two worlds - that's where the 'Rift' from Riftwar comes in, as a magical rift in space connects them - during a time of war between those two planes.
He's not the only protagonist; just the main one - there's also his childhood friend Tomas, the princes Arutha and Lyam, the princess Carline, the magician Kulgan - but Pug is, to my mind, the key character, with most of those other characters introduced through their relationship to him.
Others have commented on the writing style employed by Feist - it may seem 'basic', however that in itself is no bad thing (and, remember, this book is now decades old) as Feist gives you just enough information to envisage your own world. A bit more, perhaps, than the thumbnail sketches of Terry Pratchett (incidentally, one of my favourite authors), but nowhere near the level of detail that JRR Tolkien that could make The Lord of The Rings, well, a bit of a slog at times!
Royal Babies: A History 1066-2013
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Babies are born every day, but only once or twice in a lifetime, a child arrives who will inherit...
The Invention of Nature: The Adventures of Alexander Von Humboldt, the Lost Hero of Science
Book
WINNER OF THE 2015 COSTA BIOGRAPHY AWARDWINNER OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY SCIENCE BOOK PRIZE 2016'A...