000 01773nam a22001937a 4500
003 OSt
005 20250526114615.0
008 250526b |||||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d
020 _a9789815144284
040 _cHS LRC
050 _aPZ 8.1
_b.D44 2024
100 _4Author
_aMica De Leon
_9129502
245 _aWinds of war :
_bthe seedmage cycle book /
_cMica De Leon ;
300 _axv, 226p. :
_c20cm.
520 _aBefore the exodus of kings to Kayumalon, seed mages were revered by both strangelords and mortal men, their magic reserved only for the bloodlines the gods deem worthy. It was a time of peace and prosperity, but it was an age that had passed on into history and then myth and then superstitious whispers around the bonfire. Now, seed magic is cheap, the power of the gods reduced to a bottle of oil and borrowed magic mass-produced on magic plantations and coveted by enemies within and without. Little do they know that Kayumalon’s fate will fall in the hands of a simple Dayo slave girl. Yin knows that Masalanta Island Plantation is not home—though she longs to become a part of it, if only to be noticed by the island's most beautiful red-haired boy. All she knows is that she and her father have been on the run all her life, and no matter how many times she asks her father why, he would only warn her that the world means her harm. When the boy does notice her, she follows him into the night against her better judgement and realizes too late that her father is right. She wakes up the next day, feeling like she had the world in the palm of her hands and power that any girl in her position could only dream about.
546 _aIn English.
650 _2Peasants -- Philippines -- 20th century--Fiction.
942 _2lcc
_cBK
999 _c92923
_d92923