The Labyrinth of Melusine

“The Labyrinth of Melusine” is not a typical faerie tale. These are not delicate, gossamer winged creatures but fierce, passionate beings fighting for their very existence.
Based on a 15th century tale, “Melusine” probes the metaphysical relationship between humans and faeries. They hunger for powers the other possesses, yet desire alone cannot make it so.
Melusine, a water faerie, defies her fearsome twin sister, Melior, by marrying a human, Raymond. Her love for him is genuine yet she also has a hidden purpose. No good can come of this. Or can it? The omens are there from the beginning. Is this a bold move of the heart, or a desperate and doomed last chance?
It begins simply enough. A vow, blinded by love, is made and broken, and faeries never forget. The secrets, the mysterious hints of a strange existence beyond the waking world burst through Melusine’s carefully constructed life and can no longer be denied. The family is shattered and each must find their own peace.
Raymond, born into a poor family, is raised by his wealthy uncle as a young man of privilege. He is kind, grateful, and uncurious about the world; an easy companion to his Uncle Avery. When Lord Avery is killed by an unearthly white boar in a tragic hunting accident, a guilt-ridden, desperate Raymond aimlessly wanders the night forest. He finds Melusine at her magical fountain and falls in love. She offers him all he desires, but he must promise her; Saturdays will be her own and he is never to follow her. He eagerly agrees if it means having this stunning woman as his wife.
Melusine bears many children yet only three survive beyond birth; the heir, Geoffrey of the Boar’s Tooth, Fromont, the scholar, and daughter Eglantine. Each must come to understand the powers they possess and hints of strangeness that intrude on their comforts. Whether they have the courage to accept their faerie/human identities and embrace them, or succumb to madness and death, is a torturous path.
The home that Melusine creates is the magnificent castle of Lusignen, where all is abundance, comfort, and beauty. At its heart lies her fountain, the source of all life in the castle, its waters nourishing orchards and animals as well as the souls of its people. Their world rests on the knife-edge of her husband’s fallible trust and the eerie presence of enchantment, an alluring and terrifying attraction for the children. When Raymond is pressed by his men to spy on Melusine, all she has created crumbles; the fountain dries up, the castle is abandoned, and Melusine, lost. His life in ruins, Raymond resolves to make a pilgrimage to Santiago de Compostella to find peace.
Eglantine is comfortable with her faerie nature. However, she will pay a price for her fascination with the supernatural as she is enticed away to Faerie by Aunt Melior, who seizes an opportunity to defeat her sister’s plans.
Fromont is a wise child. His clairvoyance and sensitivity are unquestioned. Yet as he grows older, his childhood innocence becomes a devastating burden, he falls victim to strange forces which cause heartbreaking agony for his family.
Geoffrey, as soldier and heir, is terrified by his telekinetic abilities, arising when he loses his famous temper. He struggles to come to grips with what he knows to be true yet is afraid to face. When his home and family are lost through a horrific, uncontrolled display of his powers, he becomes an outcast. He must find a way to salvage his family, self-respect and Lusignen. The only way is to reconcile his dual nature. He discovers his family history through a strange encounter with his dying grandmother and the giant who guards her. He must return to Lusignen, now an abandoned ruin, and seek the fountain. Yet it now lies at the center of a vast labyrinth whose mysterious denizens, manifestations of Tarot cards, he must confront.
Geoffrey’s painful journey is a searing reconciliation of spirit and consciousness, of trust, love and the healing power of humor.

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The Labyrinth of Melusine

“The Labyrinth of Melusine” is not a typical faerie tale. These are not delicate, gossamer winged creatures but fierce, passionate beings fighting for their very existence.
Based on a 15th century tale, “Melusine” probes the metaphysical relationship between humans and faeries. They hunger for powers the other possesses, yet desire alone cannot make it so.
Melusine, a water faerie, defies her fearsome twin sister, Melior, by marrying a human, Raymond. Her love for him is genuine yet she also has a hidden purpose. No good can come of this. Or can it? The omens are there from the beginning. Is this a bold move of the heart, or a desperate and doomed last chance?
It begins simply enough. A vow, blinded by love, is made and broken, and faeries never forget. The secrets, the mysterious hints of a strange existence beyond the waking world burst through Melusine’s carefully constructed life and can no longer be denied. The family is shattered and each must find their own peace.
Raymond, born into a poor family, is raised by his wealthy uncle as a young man of privilege. He is kind, grateful, and uncurious about the world; an easy companion to his Uncle Avery. When Lord Avery is killed by an unearthly white boar in a tragic hunting accident, a guilt-ridden, desperate Raymond aimlessly wanders the night forest. He finds Melusine at her magical fountain and falls in love. She offers him all he desires, but he must promise her; Saturdays will be her own and he is never to follow her. He eagerly agrees if it means having this stunning woman as his wife.
Melusine bears many children yet only three survive beyond birth; the heir, Geoffrey of the Boar’s Tooth, Fromont, the scholar, and daughter Eglantine. Each must come to understand the powers they possess and hints of strangeness that intrude on their comforts. Whether they have the courage to accept their faerie/human identities and embrace them, or succumb to madness and death, is a torturous path.
The home that Melusine creates is the magnificent castle of Lusignen, where all is abundance, comfort, and beauty. At its heart lies her fountain, the source of all life in the castle, its waters nourishing orchards and animals as well as the souls of its people. Their world rests on the knife-edge of her husband’s fallible trust and the eerie presence of enchantment, an alluring and terrifying attraction for the children. When Raymond is pressed by his men to spy on Melusine, all she has created crumbles; the fountain dries up, the castle is abandoned, and Melusine, lost. His life in ruins, Raymond resolves to make a pilgrimage to Santiago de Compostella to find peace.
Eglantine is comfortable with her faerie nature. However, she will pay a price for her fascination with the supernatural as she is enticed away to Faerie by Aunt Melior, who seizes an opportunity to defeat her sister’s plans.
Fromont is a wise child. His clairvoyance and sensitivity are unquestioned. Yet as he grows older, his childhood innocence becomes a devastating burden, he falls victim to strange forces which cause heartbreaking agony for his family.
Geoffrey, as soldier and heir, is terrified by his telekinetic abilities, arising when he loses his famous temper. He struggles to come to grips with what he knows to be true yet is afraid to face. When his home and family are lost through a horrific, uncontrolled display of his powers, he becomes an outcast. He must find a way to salvage his family, self-respect and Lusignen. The only way is to reconcile his dual nature. He discovers his family history through a strange encounter with his dying grandmother and the giant who guards her. He must return to Lusignen, now an abandoned ruin, and seek the fountain. Yet it now lies at the center of a vast labyrinth whose mysterious denizens, manifestations of Tarot cards, he must confront.
Geoffrey’s painful journey is a searing reconciliation of spirit and consciousness, of trust, love and the healing power of humor.

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The Labyrinth of Melusine

The Labyrinth of Melusine

by M.D. Mycroft
The Labyrinth of Melusine

The Labyrinth of Melusine

by M.D. Mycroft

eBook

$3.99 

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Overview

“The Labyrinth of Melusine” is not a typical faerie tale. These are not delicate, gossamer winged creatures but fierce, passionate beings fighting for their very existence.
Based on a 15th century tale, “Melusine” probes the metaphysical relationship between humans and faeries. They hunger for powers the other possesses, yet desire alone cannot make it so.
Melusine, a water faerie, defies her fearsome twin sister, Melior, by marrying a human, Raymond. Her love for him is genuine yet she also has a hidden purpose. No good can come of this. Or can it? The omens are there from the beginning. Is this a bold move of the heart, or a desperate and doomed last chance?
It begins simply enough. A vow, blinded by love, is made and broken, and faeries never forget. The secrets, the mysterious hints of a strange existence beyond the waking world burst through Melusine’s carefully constructed life and can no longer be denied. The family is shattered and each must find their own peace.
Raymond, born into a poor family, is raised by his wealthy uncle as a young man of privilege. He is kind, grateful, and uncurious about the world; an easy companion to his Uncle Avery. When Lord Avery is killed by an unearthly white boar in a tragic hunting accident, a guilt-ridden, desperate Raymond aimlessly wanders the night forest. He finds Melusine at her magical fountain and falls in love. She offers him all he desires, but he must promise her; Saturdays will be her own and he is never to follow her. He eagerly agrees if it means having this stunning woman as his wife.
Melusine bears many children yet only three survive beyond birth; the heir, Geoffrey of the Boar’s Tooth, Fromont, the scholar, and daughter Eglantine. Each must come to understand the powers they possess and hints of strangeness that intrude on their comforts. Whether they have the courage to accept their faerie/human identities and embrace them, or succumb to madness and death, is a torturous path.
The home that Melusine creates is the magnificent castle of Lusignen, where all is abundance, comfort, and beauty. At its heart lies her fountain, the source of all life in the castle, its waters nourishing orchards and animals as well as the souls of its people. Their world rests on the knife-edge of her husband’s fallible trust and the eerie presence of enchantment, an alluring and terrifying attraction for the children. When Raymond is pressed by his men to spy on Melusine, all she has created crumbles; the fountain dries up, the castle is abandoned, and Melusine, lost. His life in ruins, Raymond resolves to make a pilgrimage to Santiago de Compostella to find peace.
Eglantine is comfortable with her faerie nature. However, she will pay a price for her fascination with the supernatural as she is enticed away to Faerie by Aunt Melior, who seizes an opportunity to defeat her sister’s plans.
Fromont is a wise child. His clairvoyance and sensitivity are unquestioned. Yet as he grows older, his childhood innocence becomes a devastating burden, he falls victim to strange forces which cause heartbreaking agony for his family.
Geoffrey, as soldier and heir, is terrified by his telekinetic abilities, arising when he loses his famous temper. He struggles to come to grips with what he knows to be true yet is afraid to face. When his home and family are lost through a horrific, uncontrolled display of his powers, he becomes an outcast. He must find a way to salvage his family, self-respect and Lusignen. The only way is to reconcile his dual nature. He discovers his family history through a strange encounter with his dying grandmother and the giant who guards her. He must return to Lusignen, now an abandoned ruin, and seek the fountain. Yet it now lies at the center of a vast labyrinth whose mysterious denizens, manifestations of Tarot cards, he must confront.
Geoffrey’s painful journey is a searing reconciliation of spirit and consciousness, of trust, love and the healing power of humor.


Product Details

BN ID: 2940154446836
Publisher: Jodi Lorimer
Publication date: 08/01/2017
Sold by: Smashwords
Format: eBook
File size: 701 KB

About the Author

I was born and raised in the Gold Rush Country of California, at the tag-ends of that era, when the old miners would bend elbows at the Stage Driver's Retreat, stroke their long white beards, and tell tall tales of Joaquin Murietta, Three Fingered Jack and the Battle of Sawmill Flat where my house stood. I'd sit on the brass rail between the worn boots and listen to the stories drift by on the cigarette smoke.The country was wild, beautiful and strewn with the remnants and ruins of gold fever, rattlesnakes and abandoned mines. History and stories were always in my life and a source of joyous, imaginative exploration. I'd pass the hot summer days with a freezer full of popsicles and a pile of faerie tale books from the library. College in Berkeley from 1968-72 was like being thrown into a cold river; startling, shocking and invigorating. Everything was challenging: the studies that introduced me to Anthropology and the Classics. My fascination with faerie tales evolved to embrace mythology and multiple spiritual traditions. I was deep in an intellectual soup of ethnic studies, anti-war protests, the fledgling feminist movement, hippies, rock 'n' roll and civil rights. It was heaven. The stories came thick and fast from all directions and history was being made in front of my eyes every day. I eventually moved to Portland, Oregon and married a local boy, a teacher of Anthropology, of course. I became captivated with the labyrinth as a symbol and began to research it, wondering why nice Episcopalian ladies were walking them as a meditation while the myth told of a cannibalistic monster, the Minotaur, at the center who would eat you. I discovered along the way that there was an international organization, The Labyrinth Society, that became a source of inspiration, resources and new friends. The history and the mythology of the labyrinth archetype captivated me and my research led to writing a book entitled "Dancing With Death: The Origins of the Labyrinth in the Paleolithic," that sought to position the origin of the labyrinth within the context of the first modern humans who were compelled to paint deep in the labyrinthine caves of Europe. The metaphors of challenging journey, of discovery, and of confronting spiritual challenges remains, at bottom, the same and uniquely human. We have two children and a grandchild. I originally wrote a version of the Melusine story for my children in the '90s and was enticed to dust it off when I learned about Smashwords. Inspired to rewrite it, I was no longer fettered to the idea of making it PG 13 so it transformed into a much darker and more complex story. And, of course, it has a labyrinth at its heart; the most perfect of metaphors for such a journey of self-discovery as that thrust on my hero, Geoffrey, who attempts to be one kind of hero but discovers he is of a different sort altogether. Writing "The Labyrinth of Melusine" has been a delight for many reasons. After the deep research required for my first book, also a labor of love, it was so liberating, as Ursula LeGuinn puts it, to 'just make stuff up.' When not writing the second book in what I hope to be a three-book series, I tend my flower garden and work as a voiceover talent. Should you come to Portland and ride the public transit train, the Max, that's me telling you where to get off. Perhaps one day, given the time and discipline, I'll record "The Labyrinth of Melusine" as an audiobook. It has been great fun to gather the stories, the mythology, the characters, the language, the complexities, joys and heartbreak of life and have them find a metaphorical home in "Melusine." I hope you enjoy it half as much as I have.

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