The Sixth Book of the Annals of the Heroic-Chronicles of what might have been

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The Young Knight of Selgovae is set historically in old Brittany, Francia, Danmork and Rus. In the days of King Arthur, Sir Alun is enjoying life at court and a budding romance in the Palace of Léhon, when Brittany is invaded by Clovis I of Francia, a brutal boy-king. What begins as a simple scouting mission for Sir Alun, entangles the young knight in international intrigue, courtly love affairs, war, and harrowing encounters with the supernatural.

This work bucks the trend of young adult literature by providing readers with a hero that isn’t blessed with superpowers, isn’t some sort of “chosen one,” and isn’t even the sole center of attention, for its three heroines are fully developed in the story line. Through Sir Alun, Princess Jariya, Countess Thela, and Aisha, a Venetian innkeeper’s daughter, young audiences will be re-introduced to the sort of complex, imperfect characters more often seen in classical literature, who struggle with self-confidence, pay the price for their brash mistakes, experience grand romantic adventures and surprisingly overcome nearly insurmountable odds. Rather than characters the audiences can fantasize about or “roleplay,” these are true-to-life individuals the readers can relate to and emulate.

“I loved The Young Knight of Selgovae. It was a perfect mix of adventure and romance. It was hard to put the book down, because I never knew which way the story was going to go. It is a beautiful story, written to perfection!” ALYSSA

“I loved the character development of the Giantess. That was one of my favorite parts . . . The wolf, Bot, was a wild wolf–but… he wasn’t. I liked him a lot. It was an incredible story line. I also liked the character development of Halvdan. I am learning much about the ancient kings and queens of Europe. It truly is fascinating. The good, the very good. And the bad and the ugly. It is all there. Of course, the good is more fun to read about! The chapters kept me interested and reading. I especially liked the treasure chamber (Think Indiana Jones—just fascinating. I really want this story to be true. Whether it is or not, I loved it!). The violence wasn’t too graphic depicting how Clovis killed _______. It shed light on the horror that was him. Awful ruler, terrible man. And I like that it is historical. However, in history he doesn’t get recorded as a terrible man, but as the founder of France. You are a great writer. This has been fun. I’m so curious about how you resolve the relationships between the characters. Or perhaps history does it for you–is any of this historical?” HOLLY M

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