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    Windmaster's Bane

    Page 31
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      According to Mooney, the Cherokees believed in a race of spirit people called the Nunnehi, a word meaning something like “the immortals,” or “the people who live everywhere.” The Nunnehi lived in “townhouses” high in the mountains, or under water. They were fond of music and dancing, and usually helpful to humans—at least to the Indians, on whose side they fought as recently as the mid-nineteenth century. With the Nunnehi, I had both a link to the Sidhe of Irish mythology and to Tir-Nan-Og, the paradise to the west. The rest, as they say, is history.

      TFD

      Athens, Georgia

      12 April 1986

      Publication Information

      About Windmaster’s Bane

      There are places on Earth

      where magic worlds beckon . . .

      where the other folk dwell

      RIDDLE, RING, AND QUEST

      In Georgia’s Blue Ridge Mountains, tales are told of strange lights, of mysterious roads . . . of wondrous folk from enchanted realms. All these are hidden from mortal men and those who have the gift to look on them are both blessed and doomed. . . .

      Young David Sullivan never dreamed that the myths of marvels and magic he loved were real. But in his blood was the gift of Second Sight. And near his family’s rural farm lay an invisible track between worlds . . . where he would soon become a pawn in the power game of the Windmaster, an evil usurper among those the Celts called the Sidhe. David’s only protection would be a riddle’s answer and an enchanted ring . . . as he began his odyssey of danger into things unknowing and unknown. . . .

      “A SPECIAL MAGIC . . . A DELIGHT FROM START TO FINISH!”—Sharon Webb

      “WINDMASTER’S BANE has heart, an easy humor, and the simple wisdom of compassion.”—Michael Bishop

      TOM DEITZ grew up in Young Harris, Georgia, a small town not far from the fictitious Enotah County of WINDMASTER’S BANE, and has Bachelor of Arts and Master of Arts degrees from the University of Georgia. His major in medieval English literature led Mr. Deitz to the Society for Creative Anachronism, which in turn generated a particular interest in heraldry, historic costuming, castle architecture, British folk music, and all things Celtic. In WINDMASTER’S BANE, his first published novel, Tom Deitz began the story of David Sullivan and his friends, a tale he has continued in Fireshaper’s Doom, available from Avon Books, and hopes to pursue in several future volumes. Mr. Deitz is also a car nut and would like to build a small castle someday.

      Copyright Notice

      WINDMASTER’S BANE is an original publication of Avon Books. This work has never before appeared in book form. This work is a novel. Any similarity to actual persons or events is purely coincidental.

      AVON BOOKS

      A division of

      The Hearst Corporation

      1350 Avenue of the Americas

      New York, New York 10019

      Copyright © 1987 by Thomas Deitz

      Cover illustration by Tim White

      Published by arrangement with the author

      Library of Congress Catalog Card Number: 86-90795

      ISBN: 0-380-75029-5

      All rights reserved, which includes the right to reproduce this book or portions thereof in any form whatsoever except as provided by the U.S. Copyright Law. For information address Adele Leone Literary Agency, Inc., 26 Nantucket Place, Scarsdale, New York 10583.

      First Avon Books Printing: October 1986

      AVON TRADEMARK REG. U.S. PAT. OFF. AND IN OTHER COUNTRIES, MARCA REGISTRADA, HECHO EN CANADA.

      Printed in Canada.

      UNV 10 9 8

      eBook Version Notes

      v1.0 May 2005 – Desktop & PocketPC .lit

      Scan, conversion, and proofing.

     

     

     



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