“We are children made of stone
Tiny voices are as grains of sand
Come to us, Marai
Man of Ai
Man of the sand”
When Marai, a shepherd living at the foot of Mt. Sinai in the third millennium BC, sings to his goddess one night, he sees a falling star. Tracking it, he discovers a strange vessel containing crystalline entities resembling earthly stones and gems: the Children of Stone. The Children delight in this simple shepherd and his songs of love. They ask him to host their intelligence; to bring them to the sages and priests who have spent their lives seeking the wisdom of the stars. When he agrees, he is transformed into a godlike being. Still a passionate shepherd at heart, Marai gathers others, like lambs to his fold. His journey to the wise men of ancient Kemet won’t be easy. Things hidden, that wait in darkness, are always there.
Children of Stone Book 1 – Voices in Crystal begins Marai’s journey toward wisdom. Blending history, ancient literature, mythology, classic archetypes, and personal inspiration, Woldering takes the reader on a speculative and emotional journey through the ancient world, and worlds beyond. Marai and his companions, through the help of the Children of Stone, find themselves walking into, and becoming part of ancient legends.
“Years ago, when I began to study mythology, writes the author, it occurred to me that the gods and goddesses never seemed divine. They acted like super-talented people full of very human passions and shortcomings, appearing in different legends like threads woven into the tapestry of time and culture. This series is the story of some of these ‘gods’.”
Kaleidoscope at IMAX a review by Donna Lavdis
This review is from: Voices in Crystal (Children of Stone Book 1) (Kindle Edition)
Reading this book is like looking at a kaleidoscope at an IMAX movie theatre. I have never read an author who has such an unusual way of describing color and motion. They really should use excerpts from it in a college writing class. This story transports you into a world you never could imagine and in a time when people had so little compared to us. Our garages seem lavish in comparison. The places and names are hard to get around but add to mystery of the story. The love scenes enrich rather than embarrass. You will hate the ending because it leaves you hanging for the sequel.
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