MOMENTAN AUSVERKAUFT

Sundering Flood by William Morris (2017, Trade Paperback)

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Product Identifiers

PublisherCreateSpace
ISBN-101974249298
ISBN-139781974249299
eBay Product ID (ePID)241015047

Product Key Features

Book TitleSundering Flood
Number of Pages328 Pages
LanguageEnglish
TopicFantasy / General, Fantasy / Epic
Publication Year2017
GenreFiction
AuthorWilliam Morris
FormatTrade Paperback

Dimensions

Item Height0.7 in
Item Weight19.9 Oz
Item Length9 in
Item Width6 in

Additional Product Features

Intended AudienceTrade
TitleLeadingThe
Synopsiseast side of the Flood (which runneth here nigh due north to south), on the bent-side itself, where, as it windeth and turneth, certain slopes lie turned to southwest. And in these places be a few garths, fenced against the deer, wherein grow rye, and some little barley whereof to make malt for beer and ale, whereas the folk of this high-up windy valley may have no comfort of wine. And it is to be said that ever is that land better and the getting more on the east side of the Sundering Flood than on the west.As to the folk of this land, they are but few even now, and belike were fewer yet in the time of my tale. There was no great man amongst them, neither King, nor Earl, nor Alderman, and it had been hard living for a strong-thief in the Dale. Yet folk there were both on the east side and the west of the Flood. On neither side were they utterly cut off from the world outside the Dale; for though it were toilsome, it was not perilous to climb the bents and so wend over the necks east and west, where, east side of the Flood (which runneth here nigh due north to south), on the bent-side itself, where, as it windeth and turneth, certain slopes lie turned to southwest. And in these places be a few garths, fenced against the deer, wherein grow rye, and some little barley whereof to make malt for beer and ale, whereas the folk of this high-up windy valley may have no comfort of wine. And it is to be said that ever is that land better and the getting more on the east side of the Sundering Flood than on the west. As to the folk of this land, they are but few even now, and belike were fewer yet in the time of my tale. There was no great man amongst them, neither King, nor Earl, nor Alderman, and it had been hard living for a strong-thief in the Dale. Yet folk there were both on the east side and the west of the Flood. On neither side were they utterly cut off from the world outside the Dale; for though it were toilsome, it was not perilous to climb the bents and so wend over the necks east and west, where

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