From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Ealdwood
Dust-jacket from the first edition
Author C. J. Cherryh
Illustrator David A. Cherry
Cover artist David A. Cherry
Country United States
Language English
Series Ealdwood Stories
Genre Fantasy
Published1981 ( Donald M. Grant)
Media typePrint ( hardback)
Pages142
OCLC 8667096

"Ealdwood" is a fantasy novella by American writer C. J. Cherryh. One of Cherryh's Ealdwood Stories, it was first published in 1981 by Donald M. Grant in a limited edition of 1,050 copies. The edition was illustrated by the author's brother, David A. Cherry. The novella draws on Celtic mythology and is about Ealdwood, a forest at the edge of Faery, and Arafel, a Daoine Sidhe. [1]

"Ealdwood" and the author's 1979 short story "The Dreamstone" (published in Amazons!, edited by Jessica Amanda Salmonson) were combined and revised by Cherryh and published as a novel, The Dreamstone in 1983. Cherryh published a sequel to The Dreamstone later in 1983, The Tree of Swords and Jewels.

Award nominations

References

  1. ^ Davis, Stephen M. (1997). "The Dreaming Tree". SF Site. Retrieved 2012-08-21.

Sources


From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Ealdwood
Dust-jacket from the first edition
Author C. J. Cherryh
Illustrator David A. Cherry
Cover artist David A. Cherry
Country United States
Language English
Series Ealdwood Stories
Genre Fantasy
Published1981 ( Donald M. Grant)
Media typePrint ( hardback)
Pages142
OCLC 8667096

"Ealdwood" is a fantasy novella by American writer C. J. Cherryh. One of Cherryh's Ealdwood Stories, it was first published in 1981 by Donald M. Grant in a limited edition of 1,050 copies. The edition was illustrated by the author's brother, David A. Cherry. The novella draws on Celtic mythology and is about Ealdwood, a forest at the edge of Faery, and Arafel, a Daoine Sidhe. [1]

"Ealdwood" and the author's 1979 short story "The Dreamstone" (published in Amazons!, edited by Jessica Amanda Salmonson) were combined and revised by Cherryh and published as a novel, The Dreamstone in 1983. Cherryh published a sequel to The Dreamstone later in 1983, The Tree of Swords and Jewels.

Award nominations

References

  1. ^ Davis, Stephen M. (1997). "The Dreaming Tree". SF Site. Retrieved 2012-08-21.

Sources



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