"Excellent cautionary fantasy"
Twelve years old Bree of the Skye people worships the
nearby stones. While the pre-teen visits the stones,
Alric intends to force Bree into declaring she is his.He
wants her "gift" as a "Shroud born" and ultimately the
lands she will inherit. Desperate, Bree prays to the
stones that legend says will provide warriors in a time of
need; her pleading is answered freeing Bree from the
assault. Years later, the Reformers consolidate power around a new
religion. They outlaw worship of the stones, destroying
most of them. One circle remains so Bree goes to the
stones that saved her from Alric as the world seems in
trouble. She learns that Chief Reformer Lord Blight is
coming; only renewal in the belief of the stones by Skye
clans can stop the destruction. Bree is the last hope but
Blight already knows that. The mystical Hertha keeps her
safe if her belief does not linger, but only Bree can save
the Skye people if she can get them to believe in the Pact
their ancestors made when they believed. This is a terrific allegorical fantasy that provides
cautionary warnings on several paths besides the obvious
religious overtones and the eco-environmental plea. The
key cast members including Alric and Hertha seem genuine
so that the audience understands motives of the good, the
bad and the greedy. Bree is a female Moses filled with
doubts about her self-worth to lead the flock back to the
Promised Land yet her faith makes her the obvious one.
WITHIN THE SHADOW OF STONE is an excellent cautionary
fantasy. Harriet Klausner
Reviewed by Harriet Klausner
Posted December 24, 2004
Sheri L. McGathy, the author of such stories as The Ancient
One (From Within the Mist anthology) and Thief of Dreams
(Twilight Crossings anthology) presents her latest fantasy
novel: Within the Shadow of Stone, a journey through legend
and myth to the time of the standing stones. To a world
where warriors are bound to the silent megaliths and the
Shroud Born walks within the mist.
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