· The Waterborn. Greg Keyes. Open Road Media, - Fiction - pages. 3 Reviews. A princess and a barbarian warrior battle a god in /5(3). The River flowed through all the land, deep and unstoppable, a god in his own right. His head was in the mountains; his arms embraced the outlands; his body lay at the core of all the civilized realms; and his legs stretched on to the distant sea. Dark and sluggish, he rolled unchallenged, dreaming his own invincible might and glory into stark bltadwin.ruhere he touched, the River God held /5(3). · The Waterborn Greg Keyes Open Road Media. Twelve year-old Hezhi longs to know the secret ways of her father’s kingdom. Something happens to her family members as they reach maturity, but no one can tell her what. She will brave dark tunnels through abandoned ruins and the savage dislike of the palace librarian to uncover the truth about her.
J. Gregory Keyes. J. Gregory Keyes, the author of several fantasy novels and a graduate student in anthropology at the University of Georgia, was born in Meridian and spent his childhood in Mississippi and on the Navajo Indian Reservation in Arizona. His immersion in Navajo culture at an early age, coupled with tales drawn from his own family's partial Native American ancestry, led Keyes to. Keyes is a stunning author, able to create worlds that suck you in and plots that keep you turning the pages as fast as you can. The Waterborn is some of his best work. When writing fantasy, it seems like many authors are prone to falling into the trap of overused settings, trite plot developments and stock characters. Gregory Keyes (born Ap) is an American writer of science fiction and fantasy who has written both original and media-related novels under both the names J. Gregory Keyes and Greg Keyes. Contents. 1 Early life; The Waterborn ().
The Waterborn Greg Keyes Open Road Media. Twelve year-old Hezhi longs to know the secret ways of her father’s kingdom. Something happens to her family members as they reach maturity, but no one can tell her what. The River flowed through all the land, deep and unstoppable, a god in his own right. His head was in the mountains; his arms embraced the outlands; his body lay at the core of all the civilized realms; and his legs stretched on to the distant sea. Keyes is a stunning author, able to create worlds that suck you in and plots that keep you turning the pages as fast as you can. The Waterborn is some of his best bltadwin.ru writing fantasy, it seems like many authors are prone to falling into the trap of overused settings, trite plot developments and stock characters.
0コメント