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The Mountain of Marvels: A Celtic Tale of Magic, Retold from the Mabinogion (Ancient Fantasy) (2014)

by Aaron Shepard

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  SIX MONTHS ON THE KINDLE BESTSELLERS LISTS!   A thousand years ago, in the Celtic kingdoms of Wales, great lords gave great feasts for their fighting men and courtiers. In timbered halls, for days on end, heaps of meat and bread were washed down with gallons of beer and mead. And in between the meals, when bellies were stuffed and spirits high, the storyteller rose and spun his tales of times long past.   He told of lords, bold and generous. He told of ladies, grand and glorious. He told of friends, brave and faithful. But of all he told about, no friend was more reliable than Manawydan, son of Llyr. No lady was more admirable than Rhiannon. And no lord was more honorable than Pwyll, King of Dyfed.   The halls are now long gone -- yet some tales were written down and gathered in a book we call today The Mabinogion. And so the tales live on. . . .   For ages 10 and up. Not illustrated!   /////////////////////////////////////////////////   Aaron Shepard is the award-winning author of "The Songs of Power," "The Magic Flyswatter," "The Monkey King," and many more children's books from publishers large and small. His stories have also appeared often in Cricket magazine.   /////////////////////////////////////////////////   SAMPLE   The next day, after the midday meal, Pwyll said to Manawydan, "Let us walk again on the mount. But this time, we'll bring my horse along."   So once more they climbed the mount. And they had not sat long when they saw the same lady, in the same dress and veil, on the same horse, on the same road, coming at the same slow, steady pace.   Pwyll speedily mounted his horse, but as he reached the foot of the mount, she was already riding past the spot. Then he let his horse prance after, thinking to easily overtake her. When he did not, he gave his horse the rein. It began to trot, yet fell even farther behind. Then he spurred it to a gallop -- but at its greatest speed, it lost more ground than ever. And still the lady rode no faster than a walk.   At last his horse began to fail, and he called out, "Lady, in the name of the man you hold dearest, please halt."   "I will," she said. "And for the sake of your horse, you could have asked it sooner."  … (more)
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This was fairly short, it was enjoyable. I especially liked that there was a pronunciation guide provided. ( )
  audraelizabeth | Aug 28, 2019 |
Not my cup of tea, but very nicely done. ( )
  AliceAnna | Feb 9, 2019 |
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  SIX MONTHS ON THE KINDLE BESTSELLERS LISTS!   A thousand years ago, in the Celtic kingdoms of Wales, great lords gave great feasts for their fighting men and courtiers. In timbered halls, for days on end, heaps of meat and bread were washed down with gallons of beer and mead. And in between the meals, when bellies were stuffed and spirits high, the storyteller rose and spun his tales of times long past.   He told of lords, bold and generous. He told of ladies, grand and glorious. He told of friends, brave and faithful. But of all he told about, no friend was more reliable than Manawydan, son of Llyr. No lady was more admirable than Rhiannon. And no lord was more honorable than Pwyll, King of Dyfed.   The halls are now long gone -- yet some tales were written down and gathered in a book we call today The Mabinogion. And so the tales live on. . . .   For ages 10 and up. Not illustrated!   /////////////////////////////////////////////////   Aaron Shepard is the award-winning author of "The Songs of Power," "The Magic Flyswatter," "The Monkey King," and many more children's books from publishers large and small. His stories have also appeared often in Cricket magazine.   /////////////////////////////////////////////////   SAMPLE   The next day, after the midday meal, Pwyll said to Manawydan, "Let us walk again on the mount. But this time, we'll bring my horse along."   So once more they climbed the mount. And they had not sat long when they saw the same lady, in the same dress and veil, on the same horse, on the same road, coming at the same slow, steady pace.   Pwyll speedily mounted his horse, but as he reached the foot of the mount, she was already riding past the spot. Then he let his horse prance after, thinking to easily overtake her. When he did not, he gave his horse the rein. It began to trot, yet fell even farther behind. Then he spurred it to a gallop -- but at its greatest speed, it lost more ground than ever. And still the lady rode no faster than a walk.   At last his horse began to fail, and he called out, "Lady, in the name of the man you hold dearest, please halt."   "I will," she said. "And for the sake of your horse, you could have asked it sooner."  

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