Main | "An adventure for spiritual grownups that educates as much as it delights." writes best-selling author Lon Milo DuQuette of The Last Troubadour »

"Brilliant" historical trilogy is "genuinely innovative" reviews Booklist

Song-by-Kam.gifSong of Montségur Trilogy

"Brilliance... genuinely innovative."

Booklist 

The epic history of the last of the Cathars, the rise of the Inquisition and the creation of the Tarot deck in Medieval Europe. A  grand adventure, "Set in thirteen century France – that hotbed heroes, heroines, and heresy – it's a wide-screen Technicolor adventure worthy of a full Errol Flynn treatment… an adventure for spiritual grownups that educates as much as it delights," according to bestselling author Lon Milo Duquette.

Populated with real historical characters, and following the early history of the famous adventurer-troubadour Ramon Lull — himself the author of 300 books and an inspiration for Tarot decks in the thirteenth century, the trilogy is published in three beautiful editions.

1457886-954164-thumbnail.jpg• Book 1 — The Last Troubadour 

"Recommended for all." Library Journal

Ramon Troubadour returns home to a devastated Carcassonne to rescue a Holy Relic and the Lady of the Cathars from the Inquisition. With characters right out of history and the Tarot deck, Ramon must save the Lady to prevent a war... Read more..
 
Available Now, wherever books are sold. (ISBN 9781601640109)

1457886-1283400-thumbnail.jpg• Book 2 — The Last Quest

 

"Action-packed second novel." Publishers Weekly
Ramon, the last living troubadour, and the other children of Magba have escaped Carcassonne with the precious Dame, the Jewel of the South in book one, The Last Troubadour. Now, in The Last Quest they must fight their way through the Phantom Wood and achieve sanctuary at Chateau Montségur.

Available October 1, 2008, wherever books are sold. (ISBN 9781601640109)

1457886-977819-thumbnail.jpg• Book 3 — The Last Stand

 
The not-to-be-missed conclusion.
Available September 2009.

 

 


 

Posted on Monday, January 21, 2008 at 07:12PM by Registered CommenterDerek Armstrong | CommentsPost a Comment

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