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The Copper Crown (The Tales of Aeron #1) Paperback | Pages: 432 pages
Rating: 4.04 | 1518 Users | 62 Reviews

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Title:The Copper Crown (The Tales of Aeron #1)
Author:Patricia Kennealy-Morrison
Book Format:Paperback
Book Edition:Special Edition
Pages:Pages: 432 pages
Published:July 1st 1986 by Roc (first published November 1984)
Categories:Fantasy. Science Fiction. Fiction. Science Fiction Fantasy

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WHEN EARTH MEETS KELTIA WILL STAR EMPIRES FALL?
When lore became legend on ancient Earth and the powers of magic waned, the Kelts and their allies fled the planet for the freedom of distant star realms.

But the stars were home to dangerous foes, and millenia later, the worlds of Keltia still maintained uneasy truce with two enemy empires -the Imperium and the Phalanx. Then, at the start of the reign of Aeron, mistress of high magic and queen of all the Kelts, an Earthship made contact with her long-fled children. And while Earth and Keltia reached out to form alliance, the star fleets of the enemy mobilized for final, devastating war....



Particularize Books Conducive To The Copper Crown (The Tales of Aeron #1)

Original Title: The Copper Crown
ISBN: 0451450507 (ISBN13: 9780451450500)
Edition Language: English
Series: The Tales of Aeron #1, The Keltiad #1
Literary Awards: Compton Crook Award Nominee (1985)

Rating Of Books The Copper Crown (The Tales of Aeron #1)
Ratings: 4.04 From 1518 Users | 62 Reviews

Criticize Of Books The Copper Crown (The Tales of Aeron #1)
I'm sure there are people who condemn this books as a blatant case of Celtic wish fulfilment. I don't disagree. But you know what, it's exactly my kind of wish fulfilment, so I really don't care. I just love reading them.This was a lovely (if rather slow) reread and I hope to get to the sequel before too long (there's a whole bunch of book group books I'd rather like to read this month which will keep me busy).All I need now is ebooks of the entire series to make the rereading easier and for the

Someone once said 'The golden age of fantasy is eleven'.....and I've found this to be broadly true. Some of the fantasy works I adored in early adolescence remain touchstones I return to every so often, like the Lord of the Rings. Others, alas, do not fare so well in the harsher light of approaching middle age. This is one of the latter.I find it hard to review this one dispassionately, because my inner twelve year old remains so damned enamored of this series. It's Star Wars smashed into Celtic

A beautifully written blend of magic and science fiction. Long ago the Celts (spelled Kelts in the book so the reader is sure to mentally pronounce the name accurately) fled Atlantis and landed on the shores of Ireland, only to find themselves expelled as snakes and serpents when St. Patrick brought Christianity to the Emerald Isle. They fled in a spaceship built with technology that had been in their people for millennia, and landed in a star system thousands of light-years away from the

Celts in space! Who could resist? I have read this several times and love the series

I bought this book when it was first published as a hardcover by the old Bluebird publishing house. I since had to purchase a paperback copy for loaning out, because the hardcover copies of this first and its successors are not leaving my possession!Celtic (spelled with a 'k' in Ms. Kennealy-Morrison's books) mythology has long been a favorite subject, and to have it writ large in space and made more personal somehow was a real treat. I find Ms. K-M's writing to be easily digested, and always

This book had an interesting premise, but the writing falls short. The foreign-language terms are far too numerous, and it seems most characters have four or five names/nicknames and titles they may be referred to as. I didn't realized two "characters" were in fact the same person until the end of the book.Moreover, most plot development happens because it needs to happen. "We can't do that." "Why?" "The prophecy!" "Why are you doing that?" "I just know I must." - that sort of shenanigans.

I really enjoyed this book, and I'm even looking forward to reading more... But the one thing that I couldn't get out of my head the whole way through was "Really???" The Kelts in space bit, as that's right there up front, gets a pass of acceptance. If your gonna read the book, obviously that's something you're just going to have to go with. But that aside, I this was a fun and enjoyable story, but it is a fantasy world that I just cannot believe could exist. The plot is a little bland;