For all of you who have been lamenting that Circle of Witches was only available as an e-book, I have wonderful news: My latest novel, Circle of Witches, is now available in trade paperback! You can find it at Amazon, Barnes & Noble, and other online booksellers.
At some point within the next two weeks, it will also be available through the distribution system. Unfortunately, because it’s being offered through a small imprint it’s quite likely that your local bookstore won’t automatically carry a copy of it. But you will be able to have them order a copy for you. (And you should ask them to order an extra copy to put on their shelves at the same time!)
MISTY MOORS. ANCIENT SECRETS. FORBIDDEN PASSIONS. Her mother had always been afraid. That’s what Damaris remembered. From the time she was a little girl until the day her mother died, she had seen the fear in her eyes. But now she understood. Now she was afraid, too. Young Damaris wanted more than anything to be happy at Thornoak, the ancient manor owned by her aunt and uncle. Adventuring through the wide, open beauty of the Dale in the company of her rambunctious cousins she rediscovered a joy she had thought lost with the death of her parents. And in the deep, storm-tossed eyes of Lauran Ashbrigg she was surprised to find an entirely new emotion. But even under the warm and inviting sun, Damaris is chilled by the undeniable fact that the family which claims to welcome and love her is hiding truths from her: The truth of the Lady Stone. The truth of the Old Ways. The truth of moon and star and witchcraft. The truth of her mother’s death. |
– Margaret
July 31st, 2013 - 6:45 am
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Would you offer guest writers to write content for you personally?
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June 23rd, 2019 - 11:45 pm
Are there any plans to publish the gathered short stories in print? I’m sitting here with a bunch of story-collection books that I own just because of the Margaret Frazer stories, and I still don’t have all the stories.
I don’t really do e-books, and anyway print seems more appropriate to the subject matter, since “handwritten” isn’t really an option.
I was very sorry to hear of Gail Frazer’s passing. She was one of my favorite authors, not just because of her knowledge of the period but because she wrote likeable and believable characters that behaved as real people do without being inappropriate or inprobable to their period. She completely avoided the “Protagonist as the only enlightened character in an age of brutes and idiots” phenomenon that I’ve found so many other places. Also I have found Frevisse’s (and some of the other nun’s) spirituality helpful in my own spiritual journey.
I never met her, but I wish I had thought to come here and tell her that before she passed.