Greetings Readers!
Oh yeah! Another wonderful Jeffery Overstreet book! I am so glad to get to read the third book in The Auralia Thread, Raven's Ladder.
Raven's Ladder speaks to us of hope. Hope in the face of despair, something I have been dealing with myself. Hope that leads us to faith to follow the vision we have been given. In this case, Cal-Raven is following the vision he sees in Auralia's colors. This book was every bit as strong to me as the first book in this trilogy. I have greatly enjoyed it, and I hope to read more books from Jeffery Overstreet in the future. They have far reaching impact.
Carol :)
Raven’s Ladder - http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/1400074673
Author Web site and blog - http://lookingcloser.org/category/journal/
Author Web site and blog - http://lookingcloser.org/category/journal/
About the book:
A DEADLY MENACE IS BREAKING THROUGH THE GROUND. THE PEOPLE OF ABASCAR MUST ABANDON THEIR STONE REFUGE AND FLEE INTO VULNERABILITY IN THE FOREST. BUT THEIR KING HAS HAD A VISION…
Following the beacon of Auralia’s colors and the footsteps of a mysterious dream-creature, King Cal-raven has discovered a destination for his weary crowd of refugees. It’s a city only imagined in legendary tales. And it gives him hope to establish New Abascar.
But when Cal-raven is waylaid by fortune hunters, his people become vulnerable to a danger more powerful than the prowling beastmen––House Bel Amica. In this oceanside kingdom of wealth, enchantment, and beauty, deceitful Seers are all too eager to ensnare House Abascar’s wandering throng.
Even worse, the Bel Amicans have discovered Auralia’s colors, and are twisting a language of faith into a lie of corruption and control.
If there is any hope for the people of Abascar, it lies in the courage of Cyndere, daughter of Bel Amica’s queen; the strength of Jordam the beastman; and the fiery gifts of the ale boy, who is devising a rescue for prisoners of the savage Cent Regus beastmen.
As his faith suffers one devastating blow after another, Cal-raven’s journey is a perilous climb from despair to a faint gleam of hope––the vision he sees in Auralia’s colors.
Following the beacon of Auralia’s colors and the footsteps of a mysterious dream-creature, King Cal-raven has discovered a destination for his weary crowd of refugees. It’s a city only imagined in legendary tales. And it gives him hope to establish New Abascar.
But when Cal-raven is waylaid by fortune hunters, his people become vulnerable to a danger more powerful than the prowling beastmen––House Bel Amica. In this oceanside kingdom of wealth, enchantment, and beauty, deceitful Seers are all too eager to ensnare House Abascar’s wandering throng.
Even worse, the Bel Amicans have discovered Auralia’s colors, and are twisting a language of faith into a lie of corruption and control.
If there is any hope for the people of Abascar, it lies in the courage of Cyndere, daughter of Bel Amica’s queen; the strength of Jordam the beastman; and the fiery gifts of the ale boy, who is devising a rescue for prisoners of the savage Cent Regus beastmen.
As his faith suffers one devastating blow after another, Cal-raven’s journey is a perilous climb from despair to a faint gleam of hope––the vision he sees in Auralia’s colors.
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I really liked it too. You described the hope in this book as "something I have been dealing with myself." That's a good summary of how the book affected me in general. There's just so much in it that I've dealt with, or am dealing with, myself. It's a great book that's both escapist and really really relevant!
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