Anya Bast lives in the country with her Belgian husband, their tornado toddler of a daughter, and more cats, dogs, and rabbits than is sane. Ever since she was a little girl, Anya has told stories (much to her mother's dismay). She's happy to finally be making a career out of it.
A native of one of the colder states, she loves to ice skate and watch hockey. She has fascination for crows, ravens and birds of prey. She enjoys the study of Eastern philosophy, Celtic myth, dreaming, and shamanism and occasionally incorporates what she learns into her paranormal stories. She works part time as a data base editor and French translator.
Witch Fire (Elemental Witches Series #1)
by Anya Bast
eBook
$7.99
-
ISBN-13:
9781101206041
- Publisher: Penguin Publishing Group
- Publication date: 06/05/2007
- Series: Elemental Witches Series , #1
- Sold by: Penguin Group
- Format: eBook
- Pages: 304
- Sales rank: 80,055
- File size: 303 KB
- Age Range: 18 Years
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After a chaotic marriage and a rough divorce, all Mira Hoskins wants is stability and normality. But when sexy Jack McAllister enters her life, she discovers that what you want isn't always what you need.
Jack is a powerful witch with the ability to command fire and is anything but normal. As the head of a security detail for The Coven, a national organization that governs national witches, Jack has been assigned to watch over Mira. She is a natural born witch with the ability to call the air. And although she is unaware of her talent, a group of renegade witches has discovered her existence and are determined to steal her power--and her life.
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VOYA - Jamie Hansen
In an alternate London where the government regulates and sometimes persecutes witches, Lucas and Glory are teenaged witchkind, exceptionally strong in the witchcraft powers of the fae. Although alike in age and ability, the pair spring from vastly dissimilar backgrounds. For generations, Glory's clan, the Wednesday Coven, has dominated the East End criminal underworld, while Lucas's family of Inquisition witch-hunters has persecuted those of the fae. Following the life-changing events of the first volume in the series, they have been recruited to WICA, the CIA-like office of Witchkind Intelligence and Covert Affairs, training as operatives in the government's struggles against witch terrorists. The teens' assignment is to infiltrate a secretive and exclusive Swiss boarding school for spoiled witch children. Startling discoveries at the school send Glory and Lucas on separate journeys in which they must confront demons from their pasts. Powell's sequel to Burn Mark (Bloomsbury, 2012/Voya December 2012) continues the saga of the unlikely partnership of the scion of a family of witch-hunters and the descendent of notorious witch criminals. Combining cumbersome exposition with uneven pacing, Witch Fire provides readers of the previous volume an opportunity to re-engage with Glory and Lucas, but otherwise offers little to entice new readers. A world of government-regulated witchcraft and teenaged undercover operatives is an appealing premise, worthy of a better and more exciting novel. Recommend this title only to those who enjoyed the first in the series. Reviewer: Jamie Hansen