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Praise for Eloia Born "Loved it! A well-written narrative of disability, dystopia, and exploration, featuring a main character with partial sight...consider it a spiritual successor to Lois Lowry's The Giver and M. Night Shyamalan's The Village."-Nicole Dieker, Discover Reedsy Extraordinary power brings great uncertainty... After finding love on her long trek across the Eloian wilderness, Leanora is ready to settle down with Tarrok and begin their new life together. But the feuding factions on Hirana have other ideas. Leanora is called upon once more to alter destiny-this time, the destiny of…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Praise for Eloia Born "Loved it! A well-written narrative of disability, dystopia, and exploration, featuring a main character with partial sight...consider it a spiritual successor to Lois Lowry's The Giver and M. Night Shyamalan's The Village."-Nicole Dieker, Discover Reedsy Extraordinary power brings great uncertainty... After finding love on her long trek across the Eloian wilderness, Leanora is ready to settle down with Tarrok and begin their new life together. But the feuding factions on Hirana have other ideas. Leanora is called upon once more to alter destiny-this time, the destiny of her mother's war-torn planet. While preparing for war, she discovers that her musical gifts give her unprecedented power that could defeat the Yarats. In order to succeed, she must accept the help of a new ally named Gulnaz, whose destructive behavior could jeopardize Leanora's mission. Saving Hirana will require exceptional resilience and trust: trust in Tarrok to hold her family together, trust in Gulnaz to fight with her against the Yarats, and trust in herself to change the fates of the planets. ...and the constant threat of Eloia's enemies.
Autorenporträt
Britta Jensen's novel, Eloia Born, won the 2019 Writers League of Texas YA Discovery Prize. Her stories explore themes of persevering through disability, found family and the intersection of various cultures on real and imagined worlds. Other published works include Hirana's War, Ghosts of Yokosuka, and her short story, "Why Not Ophelia?" in the Castle Anthology of Horror- Femme Fatales. For the past twenty years Britta has edited books and taught creative writing. She lived in Japan, South Korea, and Germany for twenty-two years before settling in Austin, Texas with her awesome capoeirista husband. You can learn more about her work as an editor and author at www.brittajensen.com