The Catswold Portal
β Scribed by Murphy, Shirley Rousseau
- Book ID
- 108577251
- Publisher
- HarperCollins
- Year
- 2007
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 252 KB
- Category
- Fiction
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
A striking new reissue of an epic fantasy by popular Harper author Shirley Rousseau Murphy, featuring a princess's dangerous quest to reclaim her throne...and, of course, cats!
There is a door in an artist's garden: an elaborate carved passageway into a realm ruled by a dark sorceress queen. There entities strange and wondrous roam the Netherworldββyet none as astonishing as the shapeβshifting Catswold...
Raised by the oldwitch Mag, Melissa discovers a perilous secret. She has more than one formββhuman girl and magical catββand once inhabited two worlds. And it is her destiny to return to a mystic realm of wonder and terror, to do battle for her people's liberation and the crown that is rightfully hers.
A man beset by tragedy, painter Braden West is intrigued by the calico cat who has charmed her way into his studio. But his "guest" is more than she seems, and Braden's very existence will be radically altered as he follows Melissa from the Hell Pit into...
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
### From Publishers Weekly This delightful fantasy posits a Netherworld located under modern California and peopled by humans, mythological creatures--including Harpies and Griffons--and shape-changers such as the Catswold, who can shift between cat and human forms. In this land where technology fa
A striking new reissue of an epic fantasy by popular Harper author Shirley Rousseau Murphy, featuring a princess's dangerous quest to reclaim her throne...and, of course, cats! There is a door in an artist's garden: an elaborate carved passageway into a realm ruled by a dark sorceress queen. There
**Experience a heart-pumping and thrilling tale of suspense! Originally published in THRILLER (2006), edited by #1** **New York Times** **bestselling author James Patterson.** Two New York Times bestselling writers merge their characters and worlds in "The Portal." John Lescroart revisits the ch