Gain Access To The Lost Abbey (Covenant Of Muirwood, #0.5) Imagined By Jeff Wheeler Disseminated As Pamphlet

fast novella to read,

For readers of the original series this is an interesting read, To know more than the protagonist can be frustrating particularly when you have to read the next series to see how long it will take for the truth to come out.


This novella answers a lot of questions,

Mia and her protector have found the lost Abbey, If I had read this first, it wouldn't have made much sense, Since I read it as book four, it answers a few questions left from the first three books, I wish I had known about this book before I read the Covenant of Muirwood trilogy, It would have helped me through the first book in the series, Still, it was wellwritten. Good

Very short with a bit more insight to Maia and her struggles as well as how her relationship with the kishion developed.
Hope there are more intriguing books like this one to come The Lost Abbey

A real nice short story, this will lead you as progress into the other stories that go with this book.
Excellent prequel for the next series of Muirwood novels, This story features Maia a disinherited Princess who has a kystrel and is in touch with the medium, Only now as foreseen by Lia it is an offence punishable by death, The story is a short one but it is a real page turned as we watch our heroine battle threw the forest to find the lost abbey.
First attacked by spiders,snakes and ticks, then by a fear liath, I look forward to reading the next book! This book is a prequel to a Muirwood trilogy but is not necessary to get into the trilogy.
That being said, I am a completist and like to read series' in order of timeline when possible, So I read this and am not sorry that I did, It does a great job of setting up the quest that the main character is on for the trilogy, It takes place a few generations after the previous trilogy, Again, you can read this without reading the previous one because there is enough information to decipher what happened to necessitate this series.


As always, Jeff Wheeler has tight writing with just enough description to evoke a picture but not so much as to remove the fantasy aspect.
His characters live in a world that he has skillfully built in such a way that you can pick up any of the trilogies and live in that world for a while.
Dialogue is well written, and characters get ideas across without too much superfluous speaking, which is important when one is on the run.


If you are planning to read Banished of Muirwood, I recommend this novella, It took me a little over an hour to read and gave me just that little extra bit of information of what the main character and her guardian went through to get where they are in the beginning of the trilogy.
A prequel to the Banished of Muirwood was a quick read that gave more detail to how Maia and the kishion came to be alone on their journey in the first book of the series.
Going into more detail about the terrible conditions they faced so many spiders and ticks, the attack on their group by the monster in the woods, and what Maia learned at the lost abbey.
Overall a great companion novella that would work anytime in the series but I think reading it before or just after the first book would make the most sense.
I read it after finishing the trilogy because I wasn't aware of it until then, Informative

It is nice to have more of Mama's story, I read the Kingfountain series first then the Muirwood books about Lia, I have read the Banished of Muurwood and started the Harbinger series, They are now all intertwined, I have such mixed feelings about
Gain Access To The Lost Abbey (Covenant Of Muirwood, #0.5) Imagined By Jeff Wheeler Disseminated As Pamphlet
Me is mostly because of her use of the kysteral, I'm hoping my feelings about her change for the better as I read more of her story, Be Aware

This book is referred to as a 'Prequel', However, after reading the firstI believe it is meant to follow the series, rather than proceed them, Anyway, I'm confused and will now go to Book' The Banished of Muirwood',
I'll let you know if I'm wrong, Decent Prequel

I haven't read any of the Covenant of Muirwood yet, However, if this novella is any indication, a great deal has changed since Lia and Colvin's adventures,

I gavebecause I didn't connect with the characters, Wheeler does a decent job of weaving in some of Maia's backstory, but because of what I know from the previous Muirwood Trilogy, I am loathe to connect emotionally with a haetera.
We'll see what happens with the first novel in the trilogy, A short introductory story a new series of the Muirwood universe,
I suppose this little story will be interesting in the development of the subsequent plot, but in itself, it adds nothing of interest.

We'll see
This was ok, I wouldnt call it a book, ad its so small, A chapter at the end or beginning of a book would have been better,
I didnt feel that this gave much information, Its nowhere as good as the rest of the books, Disappointing

Too dark and full of pain and despair, I had to almost force myself to keep reading, hoping to find some glimmer of life and hope but it just wasn't there.
The writing wasn't at fault, There was just an overwhelming sense of unending futile pain to the whole story, This is the original story behind the graphic novel "Muirwood: The Lost Abbey" a novella written by the author of the Muirwood universe.


Maia, the daughter of the king of Comoros, has been banished, her rank and station taken away, Although magic is forbidden of women in her world, Maia secretly learned, . . and now her desperate father has sent her on a dangerous quest to save their kingdom, Protected by a hired killer, Maia voyages to another realmthe cursed shores of Dahomey, where an ancient Blight has destroyed all the inhabitants.
Maia believes she can restore the deadly lands by using her magic medallion, but if shes discovered wielding her clandestine power, she will most certainly be hunted down and killed
Back story novella again

Glad this is on my subscription because it was too short to call a story.
Now having said that I did totally enjoy the filling in of Maias story line, I just wanted more A quick read

This was a short, quick read which filled a small gap in the trilogy.
Whilst nice to read, it isn't necessary to be able to enjoy the series which are much more detailed, Summer, Comics amp Prose:

Given I read both versions of this story last night, backtoback, within an hour, I'm going to rate them together and double up their reviews.
I stopped reading the Banished of Muirwood when it became clear you really did need to read the prequel first, and so I was about two chapters into the first book of this series when I stopped.


The comics version of this prequel involves far less novel terminology used in the trilogy before this whole sequel trilogy collections, but it has far more art.
Such as that it forsakes naming things the way we're used to them being such as the creature being a Fear Liath, but never narrated or called one on the comic page and yet it, also, made a better use of art in emotional moments such as Maia giving up her life.


The prose part had so many more sweeping descriptions that did more justice to the surroundings the bones of the abbey where the ocean, the cavern in completion.
The prose part was, thought, also, lacking a number of the conversations that took place in the comics and the entire leadin section wtih Maia's father, the city scene with the boy, etc, are all missing entirely from the prose.
Wall Street Journal bestselling author Jeff Wheeler took an early retirement from his career at Intel into write full time.
He is a husband, father of five, and a devout member of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter day Saints.
Jeff lives in the Rocky Mountains, Jeffs blog and suggested reading order can be found on his website: sitelink Wall Street Journal bestselling author Jeff Wheeler took an early retirement from his career at Intel into write full time.
He is a husband, father of five, and a devout member of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter day Saints.
Jeff lives in the Rocky Mountains, Jeff's blog and suggested reading order can be found on his website: sitelink sitelink,