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The Child of Prophecy: The truth is more terrifying than the legend. Kindle Edition
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$12.18
- LanguageEnglish
- Publication dateFebruary 11, 2021
- File size2731 KB
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Editorial Reviews
Review
The Child of Prophecy demonstrates that Rebecca Brynis a writer of considerable talent. Every character, important or minor, iswell-drawn and believable: no mean feat when gentle Raphel must dig deep forcourage and egotistical Alaric is challenged to change the beliefs of alifetime. The reader is gripped from the moment Abe, presented as a poorpeddler, comes across a brutal parody of Christ's crucifixion. His words,"My God, why? Strike me! The fault is mine not theirs," echo Christ'sown words, "My God, my God, why hast thou forsaken me?" with aclarity that jumps from the page. Feelings are only part of the attraction ofthis book. It is jam-packed with action, from wild horseback gallops to a shipin grave danger when it is fog-bound at sea. For readers interested in theecological scenario against which The Child of Prophecy is set, there is anexcellent Afterword by Philip Stephen Knight BSc.- Readers' Favourite
Mr. F. Parker
From the Author
About the Author
Product details
- ASIN : B08WJHFBKQ
- Publication date : February 11, 2021
- Language : English
- File size : 2731 KB
- Text-to-Speech : Enabled
- Screen Reader : Supported
- Enhanced typesetting : Enabled
- X-Ray : Not Enabled
- Word Wise : Enabled
- Sticky notes : On Kindle Scribe
- Print length : 337 pages
- Page numbers source ISBN : B08WJTPVQ5
- Best Sellers Rank: #2,428,006 in Kindle Store (See Top 100 in Kindle Store)
- #3,280 in Metaphysical Fiction
- #4,166 in Metaphysical Fantasy eBooks
- #6,753 in Metaphysical & Visionary Fiction (Books)
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

Rebecca lives near Britain's smallest city, St Davids, in the far west of Wales with her rescue dog, rescue husband and twenty very sheepish sheep. Surrounded by stunning coastal and moorland scenery, she also loves to paint. She inherited her love of stories from her grandfather, who told stories with his hands: stories with colourful characters and unexpected endings. Her fascination with what makes people who they are, and the belief that life is many shades of grey, informs her writing. A Native American Indian proverb reads, 'Don't judge a man until you have walked two moons in his moccasins.' Rebecca has based her life on this tenet: it is certainly core to her writing. 'We may not condone what a person does, but sometimes we can understand and maybe come to forgive.' In 2019, she won the IAN Fiction Book of the Year prize, the IAN Outstanding Historical Fiction prize, and the Readers' Favorite Gold Medal for Historical era/event Fiction.
All her books have been awarded Readers' Favorite 5-star reviews, and previews of her books can be read at https://rebeccabrynblog.wordpress.com/2017/12/03/free-previews/
Sign up for her monthly newsletter for free short stories, recommended reading, and news at http://www.subscribepage.com/r4m2r0
The Silence of the Stones, set in mystical West Wales, is woven around injustice, perjury and revenge and delves into the damaged psyche. It was inspired by the release from prison of Angela Canning and the disappearance of Madeleine McCann
Touching the Wire, a story of the women of the holocaust, was awarded 'Best Historical Thriller of 2015' by Christoph Fischer, a respected histfic author, and was also awarded a Readers' Favourite 5-star review. In 2019, it was awarded a gold medal in the Readers' Favorite Book Awards and the 'Outstanding Historical Fiction' prize and the 'Fiction Book of the Year' prize in the Independent Author Network Book of the Year Awards.
Where Hope Dares, is a chilling story of the fight of good over evil, courage and unbreakable love, and is set in a future our present is unerringly shaping. It was voted into the 'Read Freely Top 50 Indie Books of 2015' and also gained a Readers' Favourite 5-star review.
On Different Shores, Part One of 'For Their Country's Good' is set in the 1840s and is inspired by the true story of the 'black sheep' of her family and the lives of convicts transported to Van Diemen's Land.
Part Two, Beneath Strange Stars
Part Three, On Common Ground
The Dandelion Clock, enters the world of a young man and his horse sent to fight in Egypt and Palestine in the Great War and the girl waiting at home, unsure whether the man she loves is alive or dead. Again, it is inspired by family history and chronicles the war from the viewpoint of the Royal Buckinghamshire Hussars and the Queen's Own Worcester Yeomanry, brigades with which her grandfather fought, and the lives of those waiting at home in England. 'Totally compelling and unmissable' was one reviewers opinion.
Kindred and Affinity In Victorian England, estranged sisters, Annie and Mary Ellen Underwood, fight for the love of one man, Edwin West. Their rivalry ignites passions, jealousies, family feuds, and deep hatreds already sparked by religious intolerance. Edwin loves them both, but both are forbidden fruit. Who will be the winners in this three-sided game, and what will be the price of a second chance at love for the losers? Another tale inspired by my family history. For lovers of Catherine Cookson.
The Chainmakers' Daughter. Set in the Black Country of England in the early 1900s. Rosie is the daughter of chainmakers and lives in abject poverty. Wages for women are atrocious even for working long hours, and she has no hope of improving her lot in life. Then she meets Mary Macarthur, a socialist reformer, who inspires her to join the women's fight against their chain masters and strike for more pay. An ill-considered liaison with the chain master's son threatens to jeopardise her fight, her relationship with the man she loves, and could see her dangling from the gallows. Can the women workers fight the chain master and win?
Interviews with Rebecca, giving an insight into her life and work can be seen at http://www.authoryellehughes.com/?page_id=6169
and https://goo.gle/lbgBXK and yet another at
https://writerchristophfischer.wordpress.com/2015/10/28/welsh-wednesdays-interview-with-rebecca-bryn/
Do read some of Rebecca's reviews on the book purchase pages and read the samples in the 'look inside'. 'I've been blown away and humbled by the comments my reviewers have made, so thank you all for your fabulous words: they mean so much.' - Rebecca Bryn
THE SILENCE OF THE STONES
Two-year-old Saffy is the child of rape Alana can't love. Tony is the ex-lover Alana walked out on. Nerys was imprisoned for 30 years for a crime of child-murder and released into a world for which she's ill-fitted. Rhiannon vows revenge on the twelve who perjured themselves to put Nerys away. Greg is a busker, adopted and searching for his birth-mother, and Maddy is an investigative journalist with her own agenda. Mix these together, stir in abduction, murder, arson, betrayal and love, and the explosion was always going to be catastrophic. http://mybook.to/SilenceoftheStones
TOUCHING THE WIRE
In a Nazi death-camp in Poland, Chuck (aka Walt) and Miriam, young medics, struggle to save lives while both facing death daily as they join the camp resistance - sabotage means execution. At liberation, Chuck steals evidence and makes a promise to Miriam. Hope turns to despair as they are separated.
Will he find her again, will he keep his promise, will the secrets he fears he will take to his grave ever be told to the world? Only his granddaughter, Charlotte can uncover the truth now and keep her grandfather's promise.
http://mybook.to/TouchingtheWire
WHERE HOPE DARES
If it can be imagined, it can be achieved: man will go where hope dares. Abe has a secret agenda decreed by a long-dead pope. When Kiya, a young healer under his protection, is kidnapped to fulfil an ancient prophecy, he and Raphel, Kiya's storyteller husband, set out on a 1000-mile journey to rescue her with only hope and a headful of stories to aid them. Help comes form where it is least expected, but who can they trust? Friend or foe? Available now at http://getbook.at/WhereHopeDares
READERS' FAVORITE 5-STAR EDITORICAL REVIEW
'Rebecca Bryn’s Where Hope Dares is an optimistic dystopian story of courage, hope and unbreakable love. Set five millennia in the future, in a time of war and political turmoil believed by some to herald the Second Coming of Jesus Christ, Kiya, a naïve village healer, is kidnapped to fulfil an ancient prophecy and marched over the High Atlas Mountains to the stronghold of Velik, a power-crazed high priest. Raphel, her storyteller husband, is determined to bring her home. He looks to his old friend, Abe, for help, but can he trust him? Abe is a member of a secret brotherhood and has his own agenda concerning the Son of God. The unlikely and only alternative source of assistance is Alaric, the vicious murderer who raped and abducted his wife.
Where Hope Dares demonstrates that Rebecca Bryn is a writer of considerable talent. Every character, important or minor, is well-drawn and believable: no mean feat when gentle Raphel must dig deep for courage and egotistical Alaric is challenged to change the beliefs of a lifetime. The reader is gripped from the moment Abe, presented as a poor peddler, comes across a brutal parody of Christ’s crucifixion. His words, “My God, why? Strike me! The fault is mine not theirs,” echo Christ’s own words, “My God, my God, why hast thou forsaken me?” with a clarity that jumps from the page. Feelings are only part of the attraction of this book. It is jam-packed with action, from wild horseback gallops to a ship in grave danger when it is fog-bound at sea. For readers interested in the ecological scenario against which Where Hope Dares is set, there is an excellent Afterword by Philip Stephen Knight BSc.'
ON DIFFERENT SHORES (For Their Country's Good Book One)
Found guilty of killing Lord Northampton's gamekeeper, a young poacher is transported to Van Diemen's Land, for life, leaving behind the common-law wife he loves. Pregnant and penniless, she faces the appalling lack of rights for women in Victorian England. While he suffers disease and the deprivations of a brutal life in chains, she is determined her child will know its father, so embarks on a dangerous endeavour to follow her lover across the globe. Will the cost prove too high, for her and all those she loves?
http://mybook.to/OnDifferentShores also available as a box set.
READERS' FAVORITE 5-STAR EDITORIAL REVIEW
On Different Shores by Rebecca Bryn opens in a country rectory in Victorian England, where Ella has been sent after being caught sharing a kiss with her employer’s son. Whilst Reverend Buchanan seeks a suitable husband for his dowerless protégé, Ella falls in love with Jem, a poor poacher. Pregnant with Jem’s child, she flees her loveless marriage to farmer’s son, Harry, and becomes Jem’s common-law wife. Jem is found guilty of the manslaughter of a gamekeeper. Lucky to escape hanging, he is transported to Van Diemen’s Land for life. Ella refuses to forget him, determined that their child shall know its father. Can Ella raise the money to follow her lover? Will Jem survive the perilous sea journey, manacled in chains?
On Different Shores is a powerful, character-driven, story of a young couple and their ill-fated love. Rebecca Bryn has gone a step further than any “Romeo and Juliet” tale by setting it in Victorian times. Women had no rights whatever, but Ella defies convention, earning money any way she can, and giving birth to Jem’s son, resolute in her intention to escape Harry. Will she be defeated by Harry’s single-minded passion to father a son of his own? If she escapes, can she endure crossing the globe with a toddler? Ella will move readers to tears, and to fury; she lives. All Ms Bryn’s characters, the good, the bad, and the ugly, live. On Different Shores is a brilliant historical novel that takes the reader wherever Ella and Jem lead. - Readers' Favorite 5-star review.
Available at:
http://mybook.to/OnDifferentShores
http://mybook.to/BeneathStrangeStars
http://mybook.to/OnCommonGround
http://mybook.to/FTCGboxset
THE DANDELION CLOCK Bill is a young boot-last maker who is sent with his horse Copper to fight in Egypt and Palestine in WW1 and survives the horror of Gallipoli. Meanwhile his sweetheart, Florrie, to whom he has promised marriage, struggles to raise her siblings at home in England. War changes everything. Can their love survive the horror of war and five years apart? He loves me - he love me not?
http://mybook.to/DandelionClock
KINDRED AND AFFINITY In Victorian England, estranged sisters, Annie and Mary Ellen Underwood, fight for the love of one man, Edwin West. Their rivalry ignites passions, jealousies, family feuds, and deep hatreds already sparked by religious intolerance. Edwin loves them both, but both are forbidden fruit. Who will be the winners in this three-sided game, and what will be the price of a second chance at love for the losers? For lovers of Catherine Cookson.
http://mybook.at/KindredandAffinity
THE CHAINMAKERS' DAUGHTER Set in the Black Country of England in the early 1900s. Rosie is the daughter of chainmakers and lives in abject poverty. Wages for women are atrocious even for working long hours, and she has no hope of improving her lot in life. Then she meets Mary Macarthur, a socialist reformer, who inspires her to join the women's fight against their chain masters and strike for more pay. An ill-considered liaison with the chain master's son threatens to jeopardise her fight, her relationship with the man she loves, and could see her dangling from the gallows. Can the women workers fight the chain master and win?
http://mybook.to/ChainmakersDaughter
Short stories: Rebecca is honoured to have had a short story, Ooh, Air Margrit, accepted for a charity anthology of very talented Indie authors. The anthology is called You're Not Alone and is the brainchild of Ian D Moore. He wanted to do something to help the wonderful Macmillan cancer nurses who supported a friend during her illness. The theme of the anthology is relationships, and some of the stories are funny, some moving and some thought-provoking. All are brilliant.
The anthology is available to pre-order at http://smarturl.it/YoureNotAloneAnth
All royalties go to the Pamela Winton Fund to support Macmillan cancer nurses; order it now and support this great cause. Another anthology for the same cause, with the theme 'freedom' is planned for 2017.
https://rebeccabrynblog.wordpress.com
message at www.facebook.com/rebecca.bryn.novels
or tweet her at www.twitter.com/rebeccabryn1
More about her books at www.independentauthornetwork.com/rebecca-bryn
And for a taster for the anthology go to www.independentauthornetwork.com/rebecca-bryn click on and read her short story 'Ooh, Air Margrit'. It's embarrassingly true!
Another short story,' The Moral of this Story is...' can also be read free at http://readersgazette.com/promote/stories/39
And please, please follow me on Bookbub https://www.bookbub.com/authors/rebecca-bryn-5527e97a-146a-49e7-95c7-a30b0f603c80 Thank you so much - Rebecca.
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I was hesitant to read Where Hope Dares because I’m not that into dystopian literature, but I put my faith in Brynn, and I was rewarded with a story that I could not put down. For me, it was a good thing that my computer was in the shop getting an evaluation that led to buying a new hard drive. While my computer was unavailable for my own writing, I had plenty of time to read Where Hope Dares, and it did not disappoint. I’m glad I didn’t have to put it aside to get to my own writing objectives.
Brynn’s research for writing a story which takes place some thousands of years in the future, in a world that has suffered from the outcomes of global warming that we, in the twentieth century, refused to address, was superb. The science is woven into the story, though somewhat mysteriously, but it is also presented by way of some post-story notes. The social and political results of our failure are presented in a compelling fashion with the actions and interactions of the characters she has created.
I am astonished by Brynn’s ability to keep the story moving from page to page and chapter to chapter. I was surprised at several points along the way as I read; I kept expecting to turn the page into the climax only to discover that I was only one-third of the way through the story, or that I was only half-way through it.
Even if you don’t believe that global warming is a problem that we must address before our planet suffers unbelievable consequences, you will find this journey into our possible future a compelling story that you cannot put down.
I cannot wait for Brynn’s next story, whatever it is about.
The writing is masterful - it grips you from the very first word and keeps you hooked until the end. I have found some dystopian fiction to be predictable, but in this case the story goes along paths that you don't expect.
I found myself identifying with the central character, despairing at the rape and callous treatment of her, but taking heart from her love and the deep bond with her husband. She is not without her flaws, and her naivety is an interesting counterpoint to her knowledge as a herbalist. I thought the characters were very well drawn - they all have a depth to them, and even the representation of evil is not one-dimensional.
The book is set far in the future, supposing enormous upheavals around the globe in our time, with an ice-age ensuing - very topical in this days with all the talk about climate change. But this is a book that stands out from the crowd and has a different perspective on what might follow such catastrophe. I won't give you any spoilers - suffice it to say that I was very impressed!
Top reviews from other countries

We are introduced to a world which for the most part sounds like a Medieval Northern Europe. People are living in villages and eking out an existence from the land and the creatures which share that land. There are legends of prophets and fewer people around than in our present time.
A nomadic psychic, a young healer, her husband, and an invader are the key characters as the story progresses from interesting to page-turning. Violence, fear, love, hate, respect, honour and unbounded courage feature in the activities of believable and well-developed characters.
As with all of this author’s work, the imagery is outstanding and engraves many of the scenes in the reader’s memory. The violence and tenderness are choreographed well and leave no doubts.
For much of the tale, there is little thought of it being any further forward in time than the 15th century, and as the truth is exposed it leaves the reader wondering—will we ever learn?
A key element in my decision to read this tale was the confidence of having read and enjoyed other work by the author. If you have yet to read Rebecca Bryn; treat yourself.

Be prepared to endure with the cast of characters with whom she has peopled that world as they travel over mountains and desert, voyage the sea, witness gruesome rituals and bloody battles on a journey to protect the Gift of prophecy.
Rebecca Bryn is a mistress of the art of revealing emotions: anger, horror, fear, revulsion and, towering above them, love and forgiveness. In her exploration of the Nazi death camps, Touching the Wire, she deployed those skills to great effect. Here she uses the same techniques to bring to life a small primitive community surviving in medieval conditions, contending with a trio of mistaken beliefs and an evil tyrant.
As in Touching the Wire, the character who first appears as the epitome of evil learns, through love to shun violence and is transformed into the hero who saves the community from the tyrant, upon whom he inflicts the most gruesome punishment imaginable. That was a scene that made me wonder if Ms Bryn has a subconscious need to punish men in general. It is undoubtedly the women who come out on top in this thought provoking saga.
At the end Ms Bryn presents us with an account of how the apocalypse came about. It includes a thoroughly researched and well presented account of the science of climate change which goes well beyond the current obsession with the effect of carbon emissions to explain past and possible future fluctuations in climate over millennia.
I am a slow reader and limit my book reading time to around one hour a day. It took me a couple of weeks to get through this book but every minute was a joy.

I bought this book because I so enjoyed the author's previous two novels Touching the Wire and The Silence of the Stones but I confess I'm not a fan of dystopia type novels. This is partly reflected in my rating but I was pleased to discover the author's intelligence, understanding and faith in human nature and love of the natural world was a constant. The writing was to a high standard, the subject was interesting and the characters well-defined.
The story is set well into the future and the story's internal logic works well. Knowledge from previous years has been lost, some communities are simple and peaceful whereas others are brutal and barbaric. When the two clash the existence of ancient scrolls are discovered. The wisdom they contain is not as expected.
I thought the most powerful part of the book was the reading of the scrolls towards the end of the book. A sobering thought for all of us.
Another thought-provoking read from this versatile author.

With its biblical references and pagan theme the novel sometimes feels like a parabel using symbolism and allegories relevant to modern or contemporary times.
Not what I had expected after the author's historical writing but profound in its meaningful messages. The epilogue is particularly powerful, as is the 'timeline' in the appendix.
Definitely recommended for fans of the genre and fans of deep and mystical stories.

You sense that the author's surroundings have helped to shape this novel and although this might be fanciful I can picture her walking through the fields and over the hills drawing inspiration from the grass, the sky, the trees and stones.
Where Hope Dares is an emotional, spiritual novel weaving political, social and environmental threads. The tapestry is held together by the strongest thread of all: love. Whatever it's content, a novel relies on its characters and the characters within the pages of Where Hope Dares are its great strength: you emphasize with them and will them to succeed.