July 4th, 2025
Home | Log in!

On Top Shelf
TWO INK MINIMUMTWO INK MINIMUM
Fresh Pick
BECOMING MADAM SECRETARY
BECOMING MADAM SECRETARY

New Books This Week

Reader Games

Reviewer Application


Fall headfirst into July’s hottest stories—danger, desire, and happily-ever-afters await.

Slideshow image


Since your web browser does not support JavaScript, here is a non-JavaScript version of the image slideshow:

slideshow image
When duty to his kingdom meets desire for his enemy!


slideshow image
��a must-read thriller.��Booklist


slideshow image
Always remember when playing for keeps to look before you leap!


slideshow image
?? Lost Memories. A Mystery Baby. A Mountain Ready to Explode. ??


slideshow image
One Rodeo. Two Rivals. A Storm That Changes Everything.


slideshow image
?? A Fake Marriage. A Real Spark. A Love Worth the Scandal. ??


Excerpt of The Cornish Princess by Tanya Anne Crosby

Purchase


The Goldenchild Prophecy
Oliver-Heber Books
November 2021
On Sale: October 26, 2021
Featuring: Gwendolyn
ISBN: 1648391184
EAN: 2940163022700
Kindle: B08KH49JL8
e-Book
Add to Wish List

Fantasy Historical, Romance Historical

Also by Tanya Anne Crosby:

Arise the Queen, October 2024
Paperback / e-Book / audiobook
The Forgotten Prince, August 2023
Paperback / e-Book
The Queen's Huntsman, August 2022
e-Book
The Cornish Princess, November 2021
e-Book
Lord of Shadows, October 2020
e-Book
Redemption Song, June 2020
Paperback / e-Book
Reprisal, June 2020
e-Book
The Girl Who Stayed, April 2016
Hardcover / e-Book
Rebels, Rakes, & Rogues, November 2015
e-Book
Fabulous Firsts, December 2014
e-Book
It's a Marvelous Life, October 2014
e-Book
The Winter Stone, May 2014
e-Book
Tell No Lies, March 2014
e-Book
Highland Fire, January 2014
Paperback / e-Book
Speak No Evil, March 2013
e-Book
The Impostor Prince, September 2006
Paperback

Excerpt of The Cornish Princess by Tanya Anne Crosby

The Goldenchild Prophecy

It was Brutus of Troy, a king slayer, who first came upon these lands at the edge of the sea… One day, out hunting, young Brutus sent an arrow through his father’s heart, and for this, he was banished, cast away on an endless sea to seek his fortunes amidst more savage lands.

But little did they know Brutus was favored by gods.

He set sail upon his galley with the serpent prow and arrived at Land’s End with such splendor that he turned the heads of all who knew so little of his kind—those red-cloaked warriors with their golden helms, golden hair and eyes.

Indeed, he came, he saw, and he conquered, yet not so boldly as stories might later claim.

To be sure, there’s much to be told that transpired hereafter, but this will be fodder for another tale. Enough to say that by the time the sun set on Brutus’ first year on the Tin Isles, he was already High King, while my father, a true son of Dumnonia, was essentially his vassal, bending the knee to a foreigner, whose weapon of consequence was not cold, hard steel, but a sharp mind and tongue.

But also, because of a prophecy… the first of two fated to change our destiny evermore.

“As I have come, one day, my people will, too,” warned Brutus. “They shall rush upon your shores as a red tide to wash your sands with blood. Embrace me, I shall defend you.”

And who in all of Cornwall should have called him a liar?

After watching his sturdy ships conquer our storm-ridden bays, my father could do little but welcome a new High King. Thus, Brutus of Troy became Brutus of Pretania, and within one swift blink of an immortal’s eye, the Old Ways were swept away, like sand before a storm.

And still, this land remains an Old Land, steeped in Old Ways.

Our ancestors are no less children of gods.

I am Gwendolyn of Cornwall, princess of the Dumnonii, and this is my tale…

It begins on the seventh eve following my birth, in the room where my cradle lay… beneath the light of a pale moon. Here, in the wee hours, I was visited by two ancient creatures, and the only witnesses therein were my mother and her dutiful maid.

“She is beauteous,” said the younger of the two, whose eyes were as icebourne as a Winter sea. She clapped her delicate hands as she peered into my crib, nails long and curved like claws.

“She’ll turn heads,” said the elder with satisfaction, but then she cautioned, “Perhaps she’ll never know her true worth, lest she know the soul of each man who pursues her.”

“Oh! I know what to do,” exclaimed the younger, with a sparkle of cunning in her brilliant eyes. “I will bestow upon Gwendolyn of Cornwall the gift of reflection.”

Excitedly, she touched a finger to my brow, and whispered sweetly—or as sweet as a ravening voice may be. “Now, all who gaze upon her face will spy their own true selves in her countenance, and depending upon their virtue, she will be the loveliest maid in all the land… or the most hideous.” She laughed delightedly, tickled by her tricksy gift.

“Esme!” said the elder. “You did not consider this well enough. Unless a man’s heart be true, this poor child will be coveted for her worth, yet despised for her face.”

The younger fae’s shoulders fell. “Oh, dear,” she said. “Oh, dear. Yes, I see.” Dismayed, she blinked at the moonlit crib, and the silence as she contemplated her folly grew deep.

From the doorway in the same room, neither my mother nor her maid dared reveal themselves, and now my mother worried her soft hands whilst the maid held her by the shoulders, desperate to keep her mestres from the room.

“Fret not,” said the elder fae as they watched. “I know how to fix it. I will bestow upon this child the gift of a golden mane, wherein every lock of her hair will turn to gold, provided ’tis cut by her one true love. This is how she will know.”

“Indeed, this is how she’ll know,” echoed the younger, whereupon the elder bent to touch a finger to a wisp of yellow hair, and for an instant, the golden locks blazed like the sun’s rays.

Only it was then, in that instant, the elder creature caught my mother’s mortal scent, and now she turned to address her timid audience.

“I see you, mestres of Dumnonia!” she said, standing tall—and this was not very at all, because, although she was really quite tall for a fae, she was actually quite small.

The beauty of her was astounding, her skin translucent with stardust, and eyes that radiated with the light of two suns.

“We come in peace, though with foreboding,” said the elder. “The doom of our kind was foretold but fell upon deaf ears. Still it came to pass, and now you, too, will face the Twilight, and your daughter is the hope of all kind. Heed my words, mestres! You must unite the draig banners to stem the Red Tide!”

“Romans!” hissed the younger, with a tremble in her lips, and this single word filled the room with a bone-deep chill that caused both mortal women to clasp their breasts with wary arms.

“Is that my child in the crib?” asked my mother, not comprehending a word of the faerie’s crosstalk, only fearing to the depths of her soul that they’d left her with a changeling.

Both creatures smiled then, revealing sharp, savage grins.

“Child of your womb,” crooned the elder.

“Child of the Aether,” said the younger, before both vanished like frost from moist lips.

So, there I lay… in my cradle, in a room silvered by moonlight, with a nursemaid and mother now uncertain of my humanity. And yet, no matter their disquiet, both crept to my bedside to peer inside the cradle…

One saw a child disfigured, the other, my face as it is.

 

 

Excerpt from The Cornish Princess by Tanya Anne Crosby
All rights reserved by publisher and author

© 2003-2025 off-the-edge.net  all rights reserved Privacy Policy