With the Waycaller series D.J. McPhee has done something that few other fantasy writers have accomplished: remained faithful to the epic fantasy genre and delivered diversity without compromising believability or story. D.J. McPhee updates the epic fantasy novel with easy-to-read language and engaging, identifiable characters/5. Eloise (Waycaller #), Out of the Dark (Waycaller #1), From the Lost Night (Waycaller #2), The Dark Prince (Waycaller #3), Night of Falling Leaves (Wa. D.J. McPhee is the author of Waycaller ( avg rating, 22 ratings, 9 reviews), Out of the Dark ( avg rating, 17 ratings, 7 reviews), The Dark Host /5.
Pema is also the author of the fantasy fiction series The Faeden Chronicles (www.doorway.ru), written under the pen name D.J. McPhee. Pema has also published a collection of scripts for stage. He has published dozens of scholarly articles and creative works, including a book of travel writing, America Divine: Travels in the Hidden South (), and, under the pen name D.J. McPhee, three fantasy fiction novels: Waycaller (), Keysong () and Oracle (). Family legends inspired D.J. McPhee to write Waycaller. The McPhee clan hail from the small island of Colonsay, off the west coast of Scotland. The name McPhee translates as "children of faeries." For centuries the McPhee clan has been associated with the legends of Celtic mythology and with magic. The clan symbol is an open hand - the sign of.
With the Waycaller series D.J. McPhee has done something that few other fantasy writers have accomplished: remained faithful to the epic fantasy genre and delivered diversity without compromising believability or story. D.J. McPhee updates the epic fantasy novel with easy-to-read language and engaging, identifiable characters. Waycaller, part one of The Faeden Chronicles, is a stunning fantasy novel. The writing sings. It is rich with detail yet simple and direct. The story is compelling - Jack and his little sister Harrie are magically transported to another world, a world like Middle-Earth, a world populated with elves and halflings and dragons. This is the starting premise of Waycaller, a fantasy novel written by D.J. McPhee. Fantasy novels don’t get much space in review pages, especially LGBT review pages. Waycaller deserves this space because it’s a fantasy novel (for both young adults and fully-fledged ones) that includes a rich diversity of characters. Something fantasy readers have been wanting for a very long time.
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