Stephen lawhead pendragon cycle box set
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Stephen R. Lawhead
UK-based American writer (born 1950)
Stephen R. Lawhead (born July 7, 1950) is an American writer[1] known for his works of fantasy, science fiction, and historical fiction, particularly Celtic historical fiction. He has written over 28 novels and numerous children's and non-fiction books.
Biography
He was born to Robert Eugene Lawhead and Lois Rowena Bissell Lawhead at Good Samaritan Hospital, Kearney, Nebraska. In 1968, Lawhead graduated from Kearney High School and entered Kearney State College as an Art major. In 1969, while at Kearney State College, he wrote a weekly humour column for the college newspaper and was a frequent contributor of poetry and short stories to The Shore Anthology and The Antler. He paid his way through college largely through playing lead guitar in a college rock band named Mother Rush. Lawhead met Alice Slaikeu in 1971, and married her in 1972. He graduated from Kearney State College in 1973 with BA in Art and then went on to enroll in Northern Baptist Theological Seminary. During this time Lawhead als
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Stephen R. Lawhead
The Bright Empires Series
- The Skin Map, The Bone House, The Spirit Well, The Shadow Lamp, The Fatal Tree
- By: Stephen Lawhead
- Narrated by: Simon Bubb
- Length: 54 hrs and 41 mins
- Unabridged
The Bright Empires series is a unique blend of epic treasure hunt, ancient history, alternate realities, cutting-edge physics, philosophy, and mystery. The result is a pause-resisting adventure like no other....
- 2 out of 5 stars
Literary Christian Rock
- By J. M. Sanders on 03-17-23
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Entry updated 12 September 2022. Tagged: Author.
(1950- ) US author of Christian Fantasy (see TheEncyclopedia of Fantasy, which also see for entry on this author); permanently in the UK from about 1991. He began writing work of genre interest with the Dragon King fantasy trilogy beginning with In the Hall of the Dragon King (1982); a later fantasy sequence, the Pendragon Cycle, beginning with Taliesin (1987), Christianizes (which is to say, re-Christianizes) Arthurian legends [for Arthur see TheEncyclopedia of Fantasy under links below]; the catechizing impulse evident in earlier titles seems to have been moderated in later productions.
Of sf interest are Dream Thief (1983), set on a Space Habitat called Gotham (see New York) menaced by a hypnopompic Alien; the Empyrion sequence – comprising The Search for Fierra (1985) and The Siege of Dome (1986), both titles being assembled as Empyrion (omni 1990) – set in a mysteriously dysfunctional colony planet (see Colonization of Other Worlds); and the Howard Had s
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