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Faerie Tale

Raymond E. Feist

$22.99

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English
Voyager
15 November 1989
Reissued in spectacular new cover of Feist’s chilling dark fantasy

Successful screenwriter Phil Hastings decides to move his family from sunny California to a ramshackle farmhouse in New York State. The idea is to take some time out, relax and pick up the threads of his career as a novelist.

Good plan, bad choice. The place they choose is surrounded by ancient woodland. The house they choose is the centrepoint of a centuries-old evil intent on making its presence felt to intruders.

By:  
Imprint:   Voyager
Country of Publication:   United Kingdom
Edition:   New edition
Dimensions:   Height: 178mm,  Width: 111mm,  Spine: 30mm
Weight:   280g
ISBN:   9780586071397
ISBN 10:   0586071393
Pages:   496
Publication Date:  
Audience:   General/trade ,  ELT Advanced
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Author Website:   http://www.crydee.com

Feist was born and raised in California, and he still lives there today. He is a global super bestselling author, hitting top ten lists on every continent, making him one of the most popular fantasy writers of all time.

Reviews for Faerie Tale

Backed by an extensive promo campaign, Feist leaps from epic fantasy (the Riftwar trilogy) to the dark fantastic with a robust and engrossing tale of Irish folk critters on the loose in rural N.Y. Feist offers a classic horror setup as the model Hastings family (top-author Dad; homemaker step-Mom; teen daughter Gabbie; eight-year-old twins Sean and Patrick) settle from California into the isolated Kessler farm. Idyll soon churns into nightmare as a host of creatures from Celtic legend menaces the children. The twins are stalked by The Bad Thing - a pint-sized goblinesque being that shudders in dark anticipation of causing pain - while Gabble, who's romancing local boy Jack Cole, finds her carnality inflamed by muscular mythic blacksmith Wayland Smith and then violated in a near-rape by the legendary Puck himself. Meanwhile, occult scholar Mark Blackman befriends the family while tracing links between old man Kessler and a breakout of occult mania in 1903 Germany. Oddness multiplies - leprechauns, fairies, and other twinklies appear; the Hastings find a horde of gold on their property - and culminates in the kidnapping of Patrick. it seems, Blackman finally lets on, that this all is, as in 1903, a periodic appearance of the Good People ; but the Hastings' finding the gold has broken an ancient pact between humanity and fairies - monitored by an order of Magi, of whom Kesser was one - and made possible a coup d'etat in the fairy kingdom - with Patrick a captive of the evil Fool and a pawn in the power struggle. Blackman and Dad rush to save Patrick, but they're beaten to the punch by Sean, who with guidance from an old Irishman sets off on an quest into the fairy lands to save his twin. Too diffuse to grip fully (only Sean's final quest, with its unifying hero and goal, soars) and too weak in its villains really to scare; still, Feist milks his characters and material with energy and flair, creating a believable and memorable fantasy backdrop to doings that always entertain even if they rarely astonish. (Kirkus Reviews)


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