Visigothic

On Destiny’s Edge

by Jay P Newcomb


Formats

Hardcover
$23.99
Softcover
$13.99
E-Book
$3.99
Hardcover
$23.99

Book Details

Language : English
Publication Date : 12/22/2018

Format : Hardcover
Dimensions : 6x9
Page Count : 236
ISBN : 9781546262213
Format : Softcover
Dimensions : 6x9
Page Count : 236
ISBN : 9781546262237
Format : E-Book
Dimensions : N/A
Page Count : 236
ISBN : 9781546262220

About the Book

Visigothic: On Destiny’s Edge is the third installment of an epic series of books by storywriter Jay P. Newcomb. In this volume, the story takes up at the point where book number 2, Visigothic: Wizards and Kings, left off and spanned four years until the resumption of the fight for freedom by the ancestors of the Goths against the forces of a maleficent sorcerer. It sees the reunion of Princess Eileza Andavarsdottir of the Dwarves with her young lover, Sigmund the Volsung, Duke of Wodenburg, and the continuation of their famous and legendary romance. The plot of Hister unfolds as he still seeks to gather together from all across Midgard the eight pieces of the All Seeing Eye in a mad attempt to bring about the twilight of the gods and conquer the world. At the heart of his scheme is the kidnapping of the Leprechaun boy Liam O’Hurleyhune, son of Shamus and Molly O’Hurleyhune, in order to force Molly, to exchange the most vital eighth piece of the All Seeing Eye—a powerful talisman known as the Heart of the Sea—for the return of her innocent tiny son. Molly was entrusted to guard the Heart of the Sea by the merewif of the Celtic Sea during the great Midgard war. The wizards and the mages of Midgard with their Druid allies must prevent the forces of darkness from consuming both Molly and the world—and the Tervingian Kingdom, ruled by King Sigurd and Queen Gwynnalyn, must rise to the occasion and assemble its forces in order to save the world from the mad machinations of the most evil tyrant in the history of Midgard, the sorcerer of Dakkia, Adawulf Hister, brooding and scheming from his evil black stone castle.


About the Author

Jay Patrick Newcomb has been an avid fan of medieval literature such as the Arthurian legends and the great Icelandic Sagas for many years. Of particular interest was the famous Volsung saga from which his Visigothic Saga draws inspiration as well as Beowulf. He counts the German Opera Composer Richard Wagner and his Ring des Nibelungen, William Shakespeare’s historical plays such as Henry V, and J.R.R Tolkien works to be of great inspirations for him—and last but not in any way the least the Bible, the Books of Enoch and the Zohar. From out of this inspiration and thus building on the shoulders of these giants, Jay P. Newcomb has put together the great Visigothic Saga which is a multivolume epic worthy of the best which came before it. He is a fan of both English and German/Scandinavian history, in particular the epic time period from the year 500 to the year 1066. He has traced his own heritage back as far as the year 1166 in Saltfleetby, England and is very proud of his English and German heritage. In the 1980s Jay P. Newcomb was stationed in Fulda, Germany with the U.S. Army’s famous 11th Armored Cavalry Regiment (The Blackhorse), and was assigned to Observation Post Alpha along the East German Border—during the final years of the cold war. In his off time and when not deployed on other operations he was able to see many places and many castles in central Europe. His one regret is that he didn’t travel to England while he was so close. From his memory of these old and famous places and their brooding structures complete with their statues of gargoyles and from the misty forests of Germany, Jay P. Newcomb has drawn upon many of those elements from his memories and incorporated them into his writing. In the last decade he received an ordination as a Messianic Rabbi. He continues to write his Visigothic saga with at least four unpublished manuscripts waiting in the wings as of this writing. He has built an entire world with this series with many colorful people such as Elves, Dwarves and Gnomes and talking ravens called Huginn’s Folk. He is also writing a prequel book to the series called Midgardsvolk—as well as a book of medieval style poetry about men such as Ragnar Lodbrok and King Alfred the Great called Middangeard.