At it's heart it is a love story while also being a reflection on humanity and coming-of-age. A delineated distinction between good and evil, awash with swords and scorcery, love, hate, intrigue and betrayal. The book has everything you could want from a fantasy story. Eventually, inevitably, this brings her into contact with the human world and with it all the love, war, deceit and revenge humanity seems so fond of. Sybel accepts baby Tamlorn and along with the help of nearby witch Maelga, raises him as her own. That is however until a man brings her a baby to care for, the child of the recently deceased Queen of the Eld, Rianna. Sybel inherited their strange power and cares for these creatures alone and cut off from the human world. The novel tells the story of Sybel, a sixteen year-old grand-daughter of the wizard Heald who, with his son Ogam, brought many mythical beasts to live on Eld Mountain. Once again thanks must go to Gollancz and the inclusion of The Forgotten Beasts of Eld in the Fantasy Masterworks collection. As with many deserving novels it has never had the exposure it deserves. For many who have read the book it becomes a treasured part of their collection. It won the first ever World Fantasy Award for best novel back in 1975, an achievement more remarkable when considering that it was only the authors third novel. The Forgotten Beasts of Eld is fantasy at it's finest, it exemplifies and defines the genre in a way few others have.
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