Bones of Faerie

Bones of Faerie is a young adult fantasy novel by Janni Lee Simner, first published in 2009. It is about a girl named Liza, who lives in a post-apocalyptic world where a war between faerie and humans has left behind a devastated planet. What humans are left fear the effects of the Faerie's power so much that they will kill anyone touched by magic.

Plot summary

The war between humanity and Faerie devastated both sides. Nothing has been seen or heard from Faerie since, but in the human world some magic remains embedded in nature. Corn resists being harvested; dandelions have thorns. Trees terrorize villagers, and the town where Liza lives is surrounded by a forest that seems alive and will kill anyone who goes near. But Liza believes her father can protect their town. He does so by electing himself town leader and laying down strict rules, the most important being that any trace of magic must be destroyed, no matter where it is found.

Then Liza's sister is born with faerie magic, and Liza's father leaves the baby on a hillside to die. After her mother runs away into the forest, leaving Liza with her abusive father, Liza herself discovers she has the faerie ability to see—into the past, into the future—and she must flee. With a magic shadow following her and an unwanted companion, she will try to journey to the Faerie world.[1]

Author

Bones of Faerie was written by Janni Lee Simner, and it is her first young adult novel.[2] It was on the Spring 2009 Children's Indie Next List,[3] and was a 2010 Best Books For Young Adults nominee,[4] and a Popular Paperbacks for Young Adults nominee.[5] She has written one other teen book (Thief Eyes), several children's books (The Secret of the Three Treasures, The Ghost Horse, The Haunted Trail, and Ghost Vision), and more than 30 short stories for children, young adults, and adults.

Sequels

Bones of Faerie is the first book in a trilogy. The second book, Faerie Winter, was published April 5, 2011. The third book is officially titled Faerie After, and is set to be released in spring 2013.[6]

gollark: https://pastebin.com/E7x5ZLSY
gollark: Just install potatOS and run `tryhaskell` or use my standalone version.
gollark: Anyway, the sandboxing was a lot of work initially, but now I don't actually need to touch it.
gollark: Which makes it somewhat limited in actual usability.
gollark: It offloads all actual haskell running to Tryhaskell's API.

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.