The Phantom Queen Awakes
by C. E. Murphy, Katharine Kerr, Anya Bast, Elaine Cunningham
Morrigan Books
January 26, 2010
ISBN-10: 9197760595
ISBN-13: 9789197760591
Available in: Trade Size
Love, death and war...
The Morrigan goddess represented all three to the ancient Celts. Journey with our authors as they tell stories of love, war, hatred, revenge and mortality — each featuring the Morrigan in her many guises.
Re-visit the world of Deverry, and of Nevyn, with a previously unpublished tale by Katharine Kerr, watch the Norse gods meet their Celtic counterparts with Elaine Cunningham, meet a druid who dances for the dead with C.E. Murphy and follow the path of a Roman centurion with Anya Bast.
These are but a few offerings from the stories collection in The Phantom Queen Awakes. If you are searching for a rich blend of dark fantasy, then this is a collection perfect for you.
The Phantom Queen Awakes stories:
Rising Tide by Ruth Shelton
Kiss of the Morrigan by Anya Bast
I Guard Your Death by Lynne Lumsden Green
Gifts of the Morrigan by Donald Jacob Uitvlugt
Cairn Dancer by C. E. Murphy
Washerwoman by Jennifer Lawrence
The Raven's Curse by Sharon Kae Reamer
Ravens by Mari Ness
The Lass from Far Away by Katharine Kerr
The Trinket by Peter Bell
The Dying Gaul by Michael Bailey
The Children of Badb Catha by James Lecky
The Plain of Pillars by L. J. Hayward
The Silver Branch by Linda Donahue
The Good and Faithful Servant by Martyn Taylor
The White Heifer of Fearchair by T. A. Moore
She Who is Becoming by Elaine Cunningham
Though C.E. Murphy lives in Alaska, she has never watched a single episode of Northern Exposure or helped a film crew simulate terrorist attacks on the Trans-Alaska Pipeline. She has, though, been forced to convince people that she neither lives in an igloo, rides a polar bear, nor has a penguin for a pet. Those who are surprised by the last detail should consider perusing a National Geographic after they have finished reading her book. C.E., who goes by Catie in real life, has held the usual grab-bag of jobs usually seen in an authorial biography, including public library volunteer (at ages 9 and 10; it's clear she was doomed to a career involving books), cannery worker, and web designer, the last of which her employers saw fit to dismiss her from just as she sold a new series of books and promised to turn them in every four months. She is grateful for the karmic justice done there. According to one source, Catie began her writing career when she ran away from home at age five to write copy for the circus that'd come to town. You would think she'd remember this, but her own earliest memory regarding writing is from age six, when she submitted three poems to a school publication. The teacher producing the magazine selected (inevitably) the one she thought was by far the worst, but also told her--a six year old kid--to keep writing. It's likely she would have anyway, but she took the advice to heart, and a good thing, too: far more people after that (some of them famous authors!) told her to do anything other than write, if she possibly could. She firmly believes those people are nuts. If she believed otherwise, she might have felt obliged to get a more useful university degree than one in English and History. As it happens, that's an excellent degree for people who intend to live their lives in other worlds. In fact, one might go so far as to say that anybody who thinks she'll get a paying job in one of those fields is probably living in another world already. Catie's family is made up of the sorts of people who, upon being asked what a person should put in her bio, will all independently say things like, "You could write about the time you ran into the burning building to save the child," with wholesale disregard to the fact that no one in the family has ever run into a burning building to save a child. Even her husband the chef has succumbed to this sort of blithe fictional attitude toward the world, and has been known to fling his apron over his shoulders, cape-like, and dash off to work as if he were a superhero. Speaking of superheroes, Catie's preference is to wear her hair like a certain skunk-striped X-Man's. She is somewhat impatient for her hair to go white so she can accomplish this without having to bleach her bangs regularly, because that's bad for them. When they're not bleached, though, she tends to think her coloring is rather Snow-Whiteish, except for the freckles. She also writes as action-adventure romance author Cate Dermody. Her hobbies include swimming, walking, travelling, drawing, and moose-wrestling.