Wings Of Starlight «Top 10 LATEST»
Set centuries before the first Tinker Bell film, the story follows a young Princess Clarion as she prepares for her coronation in a Pixie Hollow she doesn't quite feel she belongs to. When mysterious creatures called "Nightmares" begin attacking, she teams up with Milori, the Warden of the Winter Woods, to save their lands. Saft’s writing is widely praised for its "ethereal and magical" descriptions that expand the lore of the seasonal courts and fairy talents. Wings of Starlight (Wings of Pixie Hollow, #1) - Goodreads
In , the constellation Cygnus (the Swan) flies across the Milky Way. The myth of Zeus disguising himself as a swan is a story of divine light taking on corporeal form. The Greeks believed that the stars were the literal wings of the gods, brushing against the dome of the sky. Wings of Starlight
When the feather touched her forehead, the cliff slipped away, replaced by a corridor of ships. Mara found herself aboard a vessel that smelled of tar and pepper, standing in a cabin where a man was packing a small satchel. He looked up with eyes like hers and set the satchel down, then hesitated, turning once toward the window where the coastline lay far and white. He reached for the door, then stopped, and picked up a photograph—the very one Mara had released. He smiled, and a laugh pushed out of him like a surprised gust. Set centuries before the first Tinker Bell film,
In many spiritual traditions, starlight represents the highest form of knowledge or purity. To possess wings made of starlight is to have achieved a state of enlightenment or to be a messenger from a higher realm. Wings of Starlight (Wings of Pixie Hollow, #1)
She had practiced her words for years, in the quiet between chores, in the hush under blankets. But at the cliff, the syllables arrived plain and true.
Glowing.
This time, when the feather met the coin, it shimmered. The village’s bell, long silent at dawn, rang the next morning with a round, bright note. Nets tumbled from the racks full in a way that made the fishermen look up and grin. Small things, the bird had said—small things that were lost but changed the shape of daily life enough to be noticed.
