Title: The
Thinking (The Landland Chronicles #2)
Author: Dallas
Sutherland
Genre: Middle
Grade Fantasy
LANDLAND BECOMES ITS OWN SAVIOUR …
The Greying snakes across Bigriver towards
Landland … all the lands are in turmoil. Meah combines
her power of thinking with the magical Book of Colours, and joins the
Bigriverland army to fight the horrid Firbog. Faith, Hope, and Charity, the
white many-headed-winged-thing, returns. Auntie Beryl has become the evil Queen
Berilbog– she
must be stopped. Many-headed-winged-things soar high over battle-fields,
three-humped-beasts-of-war go on the rampage, and, from out of the mists of the
greying, slithering Homunculi goad them on.
Meah's magical plans are not what
Landland needs– Firbog hordes swarm across a dried up
Bigriver into Landland, cutting their way through The Scented Forest, all the
way up to the tip of Mount Beacon.
Chaos reigns supreme, Landland writes its own story … but the story is all wrong. Meah
looks for a way to escape. Will she find her father, The Biggo, again? Can they
win their way home– should they leave Landland and all
their friends in the clutches of Auntie Beryl, the Grey Lady?
Author Bio
Over the last twenty-five years, the
Author has exhibited a creative bent across a range of industries including
graphic design, fine arts, and trompe l'oeil murals. He has lectured in fine
arts and studied Art History, Literature, Adult Education, and Creative
Writing. Works include play scripts and short stories. The Greying is his first published novella, with further books
planned as part of the fantasy series. He draws inspiration from myth, legend,
and fairy tales.
He lives on the Sunshine Coast in
Queensland, Australia with his partner Kerri, and daughter Ruby.
Links
Website: www.dallassutherlandauthor.com
Book Two (Print): http://www.custombookpublications.com/aweb_thinking.htm (40% Discount code: JFFFB85D)
Book One (Print): http://www.custombookpublications.com/aweb_greying.htm (40% Discount code: JFFFB85D)
Giveaway
Win 10 series of 3 Landland Chronicles character/map posters, five
signed books and five eBooks. Go here to participate: https://dallasws.wordpress.com/books-1-and-2/
Book Excerpts
‘What
is it Captain? Why are they stopping?’ Meah asked.
‘I’m
not sure, but whatever it is, it’s not going to be pleasant.
A
singing, sighing sound cut through the air, and Meah stood helpless as the
ground around the Elvish kicked up.
‘It’s
a hornet! A javelin squad with a machine javelin.’ Captain Bobb said, ‘Really
nasty.’
A
second hail of javelins splintered the ground around the Elvish, and then he
was down. The Firbog came on at a trot down the hill towards him.
Meah
stared in horror, desperate for something to help. It was like watching an old
movie; the sun-lit patch of ground became a screen, surrounded by the thick
cinematic fog of the greying.
The
Elvish picked himself up and continued to run with a loping gait. Closer and
closer to the river he came. His last mad dash for freedom erupted on-screen in
full motion to the chilling sound of a three-humped-beast-of-war. Laughing like
a hyena, it emerged from out of the greying
at stage right, and thundered across the screen at a gallop. The Homunculus
rider goaded the beast on with a whip and a lash towards the Elvish.
‘We’ve
got to do something!’ Meah screamed.
At a
signal from Captain Bobb the VDF let loose their crossbows. The missiles fell
short, hissing and plopping into the water. The Captain dropped the magniscope
and reached for his longbow.
The
great splayed hooves of the three-humped-beast-of-war hammered at the turf,
making a ga-thumping sound which echoed across the water.
Captain
Bobb took careful aim and let his arrow fly. It shot straight and true, hitting
the homunculus in the side of the neck. The beast, now riderless, continued its
mad gallop across the screen and on into the fog on the other side.
The
little Elvish half fell and half dived into the river and tried to swim across.
‘He’ll
never make it, the crosscurrent’s too strong,’ Captain Bobb said.
The
Elvish struck out towards the middle of the river. He made it about half way
across before the current caught hold.
The
Firbog reached the bank and set up the hornet again. Javelin bolts peppered the
water around the swimmer.
Captain
Bobb took careful aim with the longbow and picked off two of the attackers.
Soon the Elvish was out of range of the Firbog. The current continued to drag
him down river.
Meah’s
only thought was of rescue, and in an instant she was barefoot and dressed only
in her fibrepillar underclothes. Without a backwards glance she leapt into the
river and stuck out towards the Elvish. He was still in the middle of the river
but drifting downstream away from her.
Excerpt #2
Nera
tossed his bow and arrow to one side and wrenched the bag from Meah’s back. He
undid the flap and pulled out the black
portfolio containing the Book of
Colours.
‘Come
on – let’s get it open,’ Meah ordered. She snatched the portfolio from Nera,
slid the book out and opened it, while Nera emptied the rest of the bag’s
contents on the ground.
‘Are
you going to use these?’ Nera asked, holding up a fistful of crayons.
‘No –
not now, I’ve got to concentrate on painting. Just get them all out of the box,
and lay out the paint boards, too. Then, you’d better keep a lookout, because I
need to face this way,’ Meah said, pointing back towards the Northhaven archers
at the end of the hedgerow. She began to arrange the paints and boards on the
ground around her, and all the while leafing through the Book of Colours.
‘Yee-ess!
I’ve got it!’ Meah shouted, stopping at a page midway through the book. ‘I knew
it was in here somewhere.’
She
ran her finger over a heading which read, Mist
Experiment. No. 2. Beneath the
heading was a series of colour experiments and written instructions of how to create
the exact colours.
‘Yes,
this is what I need to start with – at least,’ she said, looking back over her
shoulder. ‘How we doin’ Nera?’
‘Hurry
Meah, they’re coming.’
Meah
spoke out loud as she went. ‘Right, cyanine blue and magenta, with a dash of white
to start with. Now, what did old Amorgin give me that will do the job?’
Meah
picked out the closest thing to cyanine blue – lapis lazuli. Next she chose a
tin of scented-rose red for her magenta, and finally a sea-foam white. She used
one of the paint boards as her palette onto which she poured a small pool of
oil of paint pod. Behind her, the Firbog drums boomed in reply to the sound of
a tap tap tapping. She dashed the three colours into the oil of paintpod. Next,
she snatched a selection of brushes from the bottom of the paint box and began
to mix, adding a little of one colour here, and a bit more of another there.
When she thought the colour was about right she arranged several of the
paintboards in a long line, end-to-end, in front of her. Then she began to
paint.
A
hail of arrows darkened the sky above as the Northhaven archers let loose their
first volley. In a flash, Meah ran her brush over the paintboards. She left a
broad sweep of colour in her wake, from left to right.
‘There,
that’s a good start. How we doin Nera?’
Nera’s
face was white. ‘You tell me!’
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