Nouveauté

Dragon Song: A Merman Fantasy of Lost Gods, Dragon Spirits, and Hidden Bloodlines. Sea Song Chronicle Series, #3

Par : Lucian Reef
Offrir maintenant
Ou planifier dans votre panier
Disponible dans votre compte client Decitre ou Furet du Nord dès validation de votre commande. Le format ePub est :
  • Compatible avec une lecture sur My Vivlio (smartphone, tablette, ordinateur)
  • Compatible avec une lecture sur liseuses Vivlio
  • Pour les liseuses autres que Vivlio, vous devez utiliser le logiciel Adobe Digital Edition. Non compatible avec la lecture sur les liseuses Kindle, Remarkable et Sony
Logo Vivlio, qui est-ce ?

Notre partenaire de plateforme de lecture numérique où vous retrouverez l'ensemble de vos ebooks gratuitement

Pour en savoir plus sur nos ebooks, consultez notre aide en ligne ici
C'est si simple ! Lisez votre ebook avec l'app Vivlio sur votre tablette, mobile ou ordinateur :
Google PlayApp Store
  • FormatePub
  • ISBN8230020127
  • EAN9798230020127
  • Date de parution20/10/2025
  • Protection num.pas de protection
  • Infos supplémentairesepub
  • ÉditeurIndependently Published

Résumé

After the storm, the world learned to kneel. The sea went quiet. The gods went to sleep. But silence was never peace-only the pause before a song remembered its throat. Eryndor, the dragon reborn in light, wakes not as savior but as consequence. Once divine, now half-human, he carries the echo of a world he once burned and the pulse of a city learning how to live without gods. Every breath he takes rewrites the boundary between mercy and ruin.
Kaelith, the general forged by war, guards that boundary with blade and defiance. His faith was in order, his loyalty in discipline-but neither teaches him how to protect the man who carries fire under his ribs. Love, in their language, is still a weapon. And Aurel, the prince who once sang to the sea, finds that every note he remembers awakens what the world has forbidden: the sound of longing that made creation tremble.
Between his hands and Eryndor's breath lies the fragile peace of Thalorion-a city built on ash and prayer. As temples rise from salt and politics ferment in holy disguise, the Church of Radiant Order declares new commandments:The sea shall not speak. The dragon shall not sing. The divine shall not love. Yet when a child is born humming the forbidden melody-Eryndor's own name-the old world begins to stir beneath the waves.
War ignites not from hatred, but from remembrance. To remember is treason. To love is ruin. But to forget would end the song that built the sea itself. Between rebellion and redemption, Dragon Song unfolds as a hymn of fire and salt-of gods who wish to be human, and humans who bear the cost of forgiveness. Each chapter weaves lyric and consequence: temples that hum with grief, mirrors that breathe, and hands that choose touch over prayer.
In the final act, Eryndor must decide whether to silence the fire that created him or teach it kindness. The sea demands an answer, the city demands a savior, and Kaelith demands the truth. Aurel, standing between them, dares to believe that love might outlast divinity itself."The sea was never meant to hold gods, " Eryndor once said."And yet it remembers every one of us."With language that burns slow and luminous, Dragon Song is a tale of rebirth and reckoning, where every act of love is an act of rebellion-and every silence, a prayer that chooses to stay. 
After the storm, the world learned to kneel. The sea went quiet. The gods went to sleep. But silence was never peace-only the pause before a song remembered its throat. Eryndor, the dragon reborn in light, wakes not as savior but as consequence. Once divine, now half-human, he carries the echo of a world he once burned and the pulse of a city learning how to live without gods. Every breath he takes rewrites the boundary between mercy and ruin.
Kaelith, the general forged by war, guards that boundary with blade and defiance. His faith was in order, his loyalty in discipline-but neither teaches him how to protect the man who carries fire under his ribs. Love, in their language, is still a weapon. And Aurel, the prince who once sang to the sea, finds that every note he remembers awakens what the world has forbidden: the sound of longing that made creation tremble.
Between his hands and Eryndor's breath lies the fragile peace of Thalorion-a city built on ash and prayer. As temples rise from salt and politics ferment in holy disguise, the Church of Radiant Order declares new commandments:The sea shall not speak. The dragon shall not sing. The divine shall not love. Yet when a child is born humming the forbidden melody-Eryndor's own name-the old world begins to stir beneath the waves.
War ignites not from hatred, but from remembrance. To remember is treason. To love is ruin. But to forget would end the song that built the sea itself. Between rebellion and redemption, Dragon Song unfolds as a hymn of fire and salt-of gods who wish to be human, and humans who bear the cost of forgiveness. Each chapter weaves lyric and consequence: temples that hum with grief, mirrors that breathe, and hands that choose touch over prayer.
In the final act, Eryndor must decide whether to silence the fire that created him or teach it kindness. The sea demands an answer, the city demands a savior, and Kaelith demands the truth. Aurel, standing between them, dares to believe that love might outlast divinity itself."The sea was never meant to hold gods, " Eryndor once said."And yet it remembers every one of us."With language that burns slow and luminous, Dragon Song is a tale of rebirth and reckoning, where every act of love is an act of rebellion-and every silence, a prayer that chooses to stay.