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![Fomorian Earth: Star Borne: 1 by [Lars Bergen, Sharon Delarose]](https://m.media-amazon.com/images/I/51ET-G+4K9L._SY346_.jpg)
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Fomorian Earth: Star Borne: 1 Kindle Edition
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A starship crashes in the land of giants and pits a space-faring race of humanoids against a barbarian race of warrior giants.
The Fomorian giants watch in awe as a celestial object streaks across the sky on the eve of Samhain, the bloodiest pagan festival of the year. Druids proclaim that it's the prophesied Destroyer, and that the end of the world is near.
Fomorian mission: seek and destroy whatever fell to Earth. Starship mission: stay alive.
One giant has his eye on the blonde-haired Brigit, whose fiancé awaits her in a nearby star system, and the giants attempt to barter for her. Refusing their "generous offer" could put the starship crew at even greater risk. Brigit's actions at the barter table stun the giants, who've never encountered a woman so brazenly bold.
Five humanoid races are plunged into a battle for supremacy — giant Fomorians, Humans, Bigfoots, extraterrestrial Tirnogians, and Fenn dwarves — as a child of prophecy lives hidden in the shadows, waiting to fulfill his destiny.
- LanguageEnglish
- Publication dateMay 21, 2014
- File size904 KB
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- Highest ratedin this set of productsNordic Aliens and the Fairies of Ireland: Through the Wormhole: The Tuatha dé Danann and Celtic Irish DruidsKindle Edition
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Product details
- ASIN : B00IGIH32Q
- Publisher : Gityasome Books; 2nd edition (May 21, 2014)
- Publication date : May 21, 2014
- Language : English
- File size : 904 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 : 231 pages
- Best Sellers Rank: #2,447,228 in Kindle Store (See Top 100 in Kindle Store)
- #3,346 in Mythology (Kindle Store)
- #3,749 in Colonization Science Fiction eBooks
- #3,866 in Alien Invasion Science Fiction eBooks
- Customer Reviews:
About the authors
Investigative mythologist and UFO experiencer Sharon Delarose dedicated her 2013 book, Ancient Aliens and the Lost Islands, to “everyone who believes that extraterrestrial life exists on the other side of a wormhole, and that ancient alien astronauts visited us in the past… We are not alone. We have never been alone.”
Sharon undertook what became a mission to research and bring to light the true history of the Nordic Aliens who came to Earth all around the world triggering the Bronze Age. They terraformed Earth to make it habitable again after a great flood. They cleared out malevolent giants who terrorized humans. They taught us everything from veterinary medicine to meteorology to road-building to navigating by the stars. They built the first schools and libraries on Earth, and assisted humans in every imaginable way as we shifted into a new and gentler way of life. They also intermingled with us and produced the Heroes of ancient history — a word whose meaning has long since changed.
The result of this research is the 9-book Nordic Aliens series being published in December 2019, but this was not the beginning. For Sharon it began in the late 1950s when as a toddler she encountered the Alien Greys who became lifelong visitors into her sphere. When your encounters begin at such a young age, you do not ask what just happened or wonder at it, for you it becomes the normal. Oh it’s this again. You don’t realize that your experiences are different from everyone else’s.
Sharon also encountered the Nordics though she didn’t recognize it at the time, not being aware of their unique traits. It wasn’t until she began to research the Nordics that she realized that she’d personally seen them, and heard their birdsong language, and witnessed their ghost-like pallor and protective suits.
Sharon’s 2012 personal experience book, “Alien Nightmares: Screen Memories of UFO Alien Abductions,” is an introduction to her early encounters with the Greys, but one intriguing entry involved a woman in a “ghost” suit, a “ghost-woman” who asked for volunteers. This is a common description given for at least one species of Nordics. When Sharon volunteered, she found herself in a bookstore in the “antique books” section, as part of the UFO event.
Subsequent experiences that she did not share involved encyclopedias, more libraries with antique books, using these books to research a book that she was writing, and publishing a book that incorporated Christianity with UFOs and extraterrestrials, though she wasn’t writing such a book at that time and did not until 25 years later.
The Nordic Aliens series combines narratives from around the world including the Christian god and his sons, the angels, Greek gods, Celtic gods, Norse gods, Native American gods, Hindu gods, and those of China, Persia, Africa, Egypt, Mesopotamia, and beyond. Earth’s extraterrestrial history is a jigsaw puzzle and everybody holds a few pieces. It is not until you put those pieces together that the truth comes to light.
Our ancestors knew the Nordic aliens as kings, queens, neighbors, teachers, and wonder-workers of magic, and yet we remain skeptical in spite of the multitude of UFOs flying the skies. Our ancestral legends are so out of this world, that to accept them is to acknowledge ancient astronaut theory. Studying extraterrestrial history may be the key to understanding our extraterrestrial future.
NEW BOOK ALERT! Ancient Aliens and the Earth Agenda: Exopolitics of the Astronaut Gods: Interacting with Humans just went live in paperback and on Kindle! Most exopolitics books focus on the human politics of dealing with extraterrestrials, but what about the exopolitics of the aliens themselves? We treat them as enigmas as if we didn't have a clue as to their motives, but the primary extraterrestrials who colonized our entire planet thousands of years ago left a rich history of their activities and motives. We interacted with these beings and we knew them well. Have a look at the exopolitics from the other side. -- 10-7-2022
NORDIC ALIENS AVAILABLE IN AUDIOBOOKS: Our narrators have been busy! All nine Nordic Aliens books are available in paperback, eBook, and audiobook, with audiobooks available on Amazon, Audible, and iTunes. Ancient Aliens and the Age of Giants, and Ancient Aliens and the Lost Islands are available in these formats as well. Have a listen!
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I love sci-fi. I'm currently reading The Martian. Though it doesn't fit with my goal of books written by women authors about strong female characters, it could easily be. The main character isn't a macho type who demeans ladies. Ann McCaffery wrote my kind of sci-fi.
But here we are again... It started out in outer-space. I started liking one of the main characters, Brigit. But she sort of got lost in the story and then it became another excuse for a war.
Here you have a story with possibilities, of invention and exploration. What we end up with is a backward planet (Earth) who believed men should rule and fight, and women stay home and birth babies. Tell me, if the best fighter, killer, is the winner of any war, how is it possible to make a better world? And if women were in charge of that, they wouldn't want war. They don't want their sons or husbands or fathers to die. Why go through the trouble to birth these people to send them out to die?
On the other hand, this story is a representation of what could have happened in early Irish history. That there are stories that include THEE Brigit that include space travelers in it quite interesting. But that part of the tale came after the story was told. The author telling how the story came into being from research done before writing the fictional version.
So, hey, you may like it. Maybe, if you are like me, the narrator will win your heart, or the possibility that Brigit is from another world? Imagine if sci-fi was a record of history of a religion! Enjoy!
The story starts out with a very chirpy Tirnogian blonde-haired girl asking for a last get-away trip with her father before her wedding with a handsome man in the near by "star system" and requesting the crew members of the starship, they're travelling in, for a detour towards Fomorian Earth. Not surprisingly enough, they crash in the land on Earth and thus the actual family drama begins. Because of one mistake, these people are stranded in another system ruled by giants and struggling to be not destroyed by them.
The nomenclature seems way too complicated to get a grip on the story initially, but once you are aware of the characters the only thing matters is who is a giant, a Tirnogian, a Fenn, Bigfoot and a humanoid. Its a war between the races and is built up on a prophecy, eventually leading to the fall of evil. There were also multiple stories going on simultaneously which made it a little difficult to catch up, nevertheless, it was a quick and entertaining read, but not if you're expecting something sci-fi type.
The writing was not flowy and smooth, so the time lapses were not noticeable. It didn't seem like good story telling, althought the story itself kept me interested to know the end.The war at the end was filled with action which contributed to about only last hour of the story. Elan O'Connor's narration was not impressive but not bad, the voices felt a little high-pitched, although the variation was great, production was fine.
Audiobook provided for review by the audiobookreviewer dot com
Brigit's proposed adventure is to check out a planet populated by human beings. When her father indulges her, Brigit finds more than just a pre-wedding escapade.
According to the authors:
"The Star Borne series was inspired by the actual history of an ancient Irish race known as the Tuatha dé Danann, who are the Tirnogians in Star Borne, named for one of their true-life island strongholds — Tír-na-nóg.
"Historians portray them as Humans, but legend has it that they came down from the stars around 1500 B.C. According to The Irish Mythological Cycle and Celtic Mythology by Henry d'Arbois de Jubainville in 1903, the most ancient beliefs about the arrival of the Tuatha dé Danann were that they literally came down from Heaven 'on the wings of the wind'."
Lars Bergen and Sharon Delarose's Fomorian Earth: Star Borne is the first book in a series. Star Borne is a wonderful story. It is beautifully imagined and executed. The sketches and maps add to the story, adding breadth and depth. There are also songs. Hear the music in your head as you read the words.
Oh, and it all ties into what centuries later will become Celtic mythology.
Every plot twist and story development happens with a feeling of inevitability, as if this was the only way it could ever happen. Given that it's mythology, it's completely appropriate.
The characters are well-developed and likable (where appropriate, of course), and the setting is coherent and believable within the bounds of suspended disbelief.
I liked it, a lot. It's not quite perfect, but it's fun--and there are times when that's more important.
There's also a lengthy appendix where the authors attempt to provide justification for ancient astronauts as a thing that really happened. Your mileage may vary as to how compelling their arguments are.
Top reviews from other countries


The idea sounds alright, but the plot got boring and long and i didn't get a feel for the characters or become interested in their story.



Give the pair on the cover, I first assumed that this had a strong romantic element, but I was pleasantly surprised as action of a different kind came to the fore.
Epic battles, spies and double-crossing, interspecies cooperation...hell, this would be brilliant turned into a movie or a TV series.
Yes, I enjoyed this - the start of a very promising saga.