Gods of Prophecy

Part 3 of Daughter of Dreams

by Robert Bowman


Formats

Softcover
$14.95
$11.50
Softcover
$11.50

Book Details

Language : English
Publication Date : 4/18/2005

Format : Softcover
Dimensions : 6x9
Page Count : 184
ISBN : 9781420804140

About the Book

In Gods of Prophecy (Part 3 of Daughter of Dreams), Behrtith, a ghost, hides in Baebelle. At 14 years old, she is a Virgin cloistered in the Celestial Temple, dedicated to the Gods to ascend to Acolyte, Cenobite, Celestial. Not heavenly, Celestials. They are the most powerful Mind Witches known, passionless, ruthless, murderous, led by a Sibyl who secretly is an ancient liche named Harla. Behrtith knows of Harla, as does Perelle, the ghost of a past Sibyl. Baebelle, trained as a Preceptive and a Tark, has become a Preceptemotive and a Barban by living with and being tutored by Ravia (Part 2, The Swan Goddess), an Acolyte who is a highborn native Barban. They are in love, an alien passion in the Temple. They mean to escape, and for help, must get to Perelle, who hides in a crypt under the Temple. Trouble is, the Gods begin giving prophetic Oracles through Baebelle. It invests her as Celestial while yet a Virgin, too valuable to be let leave, and too powerful to be let live. Behrtith faces violation by one King and murder by another, and naive Baebelle learns how Gods, Kings, Sex and the Sibyl are deadly dangers to innocent virgins.


About the Author

Robert E. Bowman was born and lives in the U.S. Midwest, is married and has four children. He is a scientist (chemistry and behavior), a university professor, and most recently, an elected public official.

 

Formative to his novels, he is an eclectic reader (philosophy, science, religion, literature) and has also played Advanced Dungeons and Dragons for years. His fantasy novels assume dualism, treating body and soul as different forms of existence. Thus, they treat awareness (the soul) as part of an unreal universe parallel to the real, in a medieval setting he used in his AD&D games.

 

The physical universe defines the real. Existences outside that physical system are unreal. Thus, awarenesses, and the meanings carried by languages, are unreal. Yet, they exist, for which a complete theory of existence must incorporate them.

 

So, in that sense, his book is his awareness, transmitting to that of the Reader. Yet, no physical analysis can reveal the meaning (the unreal) which his book transmits from him to the Reader. The unreal of a book survives death. Does the unreal of the author?