Tinderbox, W.A. Simpson
Tinderbox, W.A. Simpson
List: $34.99 | Sale: $24.50
Club: $17.49

Tinderbox

Author: W.A. Simpson

Narrator: Ruthie Bowles

Unabridged: 10 hr 16 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Published: 05/28/2024


Synopsis

A tinderbox, three huge hounds within, and an underground kingdom of old magic. Fans of Sarah J. Maas and Holly Black, myth and magic, fairy tales and fantasy will love the dark adventures of the Riven Isles. Isbet returns home to find the witch who raised her murdered and her prized possession, the Tinderbox, stolen. She discovers a common man has used it to seize the throne—the same who conquered Prince Bram’s kingdom. Isbet’s goals are vengeance and reclaim the Box. For Bram, it is to free his homeland. When they are summoned to an underground kingdom, they must set aside their personal desires as they learn dark fey are bringing an ancient source of magic back to life. If they cannot halt the rise of the old magic, it will tear apart the Riven Isles.

About W.A. Simpson

Wendy has been writing since the age of five and finished her first novel at fourteen. Tinderbox is her debut novel. When she’s not writing, she’s reading, working in her garden, or gaming and streaming on Twitch. Visit her blog at authorwasimpson.com to learn more.


Reviews

Goodreads review by Richard

This is a long, long oral history of the cable channel HBO (and now a streaming service, HBO Max). It is an exhaustive look at all aspects, from a small beginning in the 1970s, trying to cable up a few apartment buildings, to being able to broadcast via satellite to cable operators all over the worl......more

Goodreads review by Paul

I love HBO. So I was fascinated to get a look behind the so-called curtain of entertainment history and get a better understanding of just how HBO came to be. It's an enthralling history of one of today's biggest entertainment brands that started with just 300 people hooked up to a cable in the grou......more

Goodreads review by Justin

The oral history from the creatives captivates, but HBO’s corporate goons are not nearly as compelling as those in Miller’s “Powerhouse”.......more