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I thoroughly enjoyed reading the Three Fugitives fantasy novel and cannot wait to read the next novel. The characters seemed real, as like some people that I have known in my life. From a boy growing into a man, a Zhiv from having no confidence to feeling to having a sense of worth, to the haughty all knowing woman, who always knows best.  My favourite part of the book is when Orren stands up to his two friends and tells them to behave themselves.

The book flowed easily and was well paced. It has left me wanting more.  Where is book number two?  I want to know who the Lady is that Lord Berthus meets and what powers the other stones have.

Paul

Perth, Australia

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Having not read many novels in the genre of the Three Fugitives, it was a rather interesting journey for me. I found the book to be reminiscent of the Lord of the Rings trilogy, in that the characters reminded me of some Tolkein’s famous protagonists. Nat Howler writes in intricate detail, his characters delicately crafted – almost three-dimensional. I gained a true sense of who they were in the opening chapters.

My favourite part of the book was when Richard spoke to Orren on the old man’s deathbed. It showed clearly the type of young man Orren was, a man who hadn’t lost his will to live and who showed his deep sense of loss at the passing of Richard, even though he was forced to live in a pig-sty for most of his life and could very easily have lost all sense of humanness during this torturous time. I believe the author shows a great deal of promise, and readers who liked the Lord of the Rings (of which there are millions, obviously) will do well to take a look at the Three Fugitives by Nat Howler.

Heidi Baugh – Cardiff, Wales

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The Six Stones Trilogy

The six gwellen are ancient magical stones that were hidden centuries ago in the vast wilderness.  The ruthless Lord Berthus Randolphus has found one of them and has discovered that he possesses the rare ability to use its powers.  His despised thirteen-year-old half brother, Orren, has the same ability.  Berthus desires the gwellen for his own purposes, and sets off on a quest to find them.  Orren embarks on a similar mission, intending thereby to foil his brother’s nefarious plans.

Book Two – Everywhere Foes Lurk by Nat howler

Here is a quick introduction to Book Two in the Six Stones Trilogy

Young Orren Randolphus and his friends, Haxel the goblin and Marett the heiress, have escaped into the Forest of Doom and, by doing so have foiled Lord Berthus’s pursuit of them.  They have gone from one bad situation to another, however, because the forest is full of terrifying monsters from the evil past.  Should they make it out alive, their quest for the fabled gwellen will still be fraught with peril.

Ahead lies the land of Rivulein, which is full of human enemies, including Berthus’s new allies.  Beyond that, are enormous mountains that seem to be impassable, but which the trio has to cross.

Two unusual allies aid Orren and his friends, but one only intends to stay with them long enough to fulfill a single duty, and the other one has unclear intentions.

Most disturbing of all, however, is a message imparted to Orren in a dream that, unless he can find a safe refuge for the six gwellen, there will always be the danger of their powers being abused.

Book Two is now completely written and just waiting for the publisher. We’ll let you know as soon as it is available in the stores.

Nat Howler.

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Three Fugitives by Nat Howler

Three Fugitives

The Three Fugitives, by Nat Howler is a great read, a fantasy adventure book for all ages …

A  teenage boy, Orren, terrorized and kept in a pig sty by his older half-brother, Lord Berthus, finally escapes from his childhood cage, together with the fabled gwell stone that Lord Berthus treasures.  Enraged, Lord Berthus raises an army of thugs to pursue the boy and k ill him, take the stone back , and abuse its power to become the evil master of all . . .
Will Orren get away?  He unexpectedly finds himself together with two unlikely companions, a clumsy goblin and a pompous girl from an ancient bloodline.  Together they flee for their lives through dangerous territory, facing wild beasts, terrifyingly active thorn bushes, and a cult with a sinister reputation.  Meanwhile, Lord Berthus is always hot on their tail. . .
Praise for Nat Howler’s Three Fugitives
Three Fugitives  pulls readers into a fantasy realm with action, adventure, and characters that are easy to love.  Even though Howler has created a world full of monsters, mayhem, heroes, and heroines, the novel is also a mirror of our own disturbing reality where the borders of good and evil are not clearly defined.  – Review from ForeWord Magazine

It moved through an imaginative but credible world at a rattling good pace.  The three fugitive characters are a delight.  I would call it a howling good read.  – Kathie Bundock

An uplifting and insightful tale about extreme alienation and the tumultuous path to redemption experienced by an abused boy, an orphan girl and a pitifully clumsy and self-doubting goblin.  – Malcolm Monussen

Three Fugitives  kept me hooked.  The pace of my reading met the pace of the chase of Orren and his little posse.  This is a classical tale of friendship, love, mystery, and enchantment with an unpredictable and intricate plot.  –  D r. C. Rael

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New Map of The Corcadine Peninsula where the story of the “Three Fugitives” begins…

This is where Book One starts, and in the book you can also find how the Corcadine Peninsula links ups with the mainland of South West LeFain.
The Three Fugitives fantasy book is available for sale online at Amazon.com and through additional wholesale and retail channels worldwide. Buy it for only $15 at Amazon click here
Also available as an electronic book for instant download to your smartphone, PC, Mac or e-book reader. Download it for only $9.99 at Kindle click here

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Whenever I meet someone who has read my book, Three Fugitives, I am almost invariably asked a version of the following question.  “Where, Mr. Howler, did you get the inspiration for your ideas?”  My dull and uninspiring answer is always, “It’s a long story.”  To this, my readers reply, “oh,” before walking away unsatisfied.  They deserve a better response, so here goes.

I was raised by two of the kindest, most loving people in the world.  My father was a doctor and my mother a nurse.  They could have stayed in the United Kingdom, pursuing lucrative careers, and living lives of privilege, but instead they chose to treat poor and disadvantaged folks in the Third World.  They were always on the move from country to country dispensing medical care and going wherever they were needed most.

At the same time, however, they bestowed great love upon my sister Joyce and I, educated us, provided us with books and simple toys, adopted a young Mozambican refugee named Zetta, and even took in an abandoned puppy.  All of this they did while living on a shoestring budget that depended entirely on donations.

Their lives were anything but easy.  My father was from a poor background and his every achievement was a struggle.  My mother’s partisan North Irish Catholic family cut her off completely because she married an “English enemy.”  My parents threw themselves into their work, but there were always people they could not save, and conditions they were powerless to change.  All of it took an emotional toll on them.  My sister Joyce and I shared many of their experiences and mourned together with them when our beloved Zetta died in an accident.

We were sensitive children, and we responded to the suffering around us in different ways.  Joyce became a Buddhist nun, and I retreated into a

fantasy world of my own.  I read numerous fantasy and science fiction books, and made up my own stories.  During my college years in America, I spent most of my spare time writing, but sharing what I wrote with nobody, because I did not have the self-confidence to imagine that anyone would be interested in my stories.

To cut a very long story short (My apologies for saying this, everyone.), I ended up living in Atlanta, working in a video store, and sharing a little house with my cousin Greta.  It was she who introduced me to Phyllis, who would become my life partner.

Phyllis loved me for who I was, but she was troubled by the fact that I did not have any aspirations toward doing anything different with my life.  I was, in her words, stuck in a “comfort zone,” and though it was not the most fulfilling existence, it was safe and secure.  Then one day she saw some samples of my writing and showed them to Greta.  Whenever those two put their heads together, they can be very persuasive, and that was how I discovered my destiny as a writer.

What about those who perpetrate evil?  I have never myself come across a truly evil tyrant or criminal type, but I have seen the destruction that such individuals can wreak.  Where do the Hitlers, Pol Pots, bin Ladens, and the men and women who follow them come from?  I have endeavored to show the perspective of one such villain, while at the same time condemning what he does.  By understanding evil, we should never excuse it; rather we should use our understanding of it to fight it at its roots.  Above all, we should always remember that good and evil is a matter of our own personal choices.

I want my fantasy books to speak to all of us and for my readers to relate the quest for the gwellen, to their own lives.  Above all, I want them to realize that the real gwellen are the ones each one of us has in his or her heart.

Nat Howler – Author of   Three Fugitives and Everywhere Foes Lurk

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Three Fugitives by Nat Howler

Three Fugitives

Three Fugitives pulls readers into a fantasy realm with action, adventure, and characters that are easy to love. Even though Howler has created a world full of monsters, mayhem, heroes, and heroines, the novel is also a mirror of our own disturbing reality where the borders of good and evil are not clearly defined.  – Forward Clarion

It moved through an imaginative but credible world at a rattling good pace. The three fugitive characters are a delight. I would call it a howling good read.  – Kathie Bundock

An uplifting and insightful tale about extreme alienation and the tumultuous path to redemption experienced by an abused boy, an orphan girl and a pitifully clumsy and self-doubting goblin.

Malcolm Monussen

Three Fugitives kept me hooked. The pace of my reading met the pace of the chase of Orren and his little posse. This is a classical tale of friendship, love, mystery, and enchantment with an unpredictable and intricate plot.

-   Dr. C. Rael

Nat Howler’s Three Fugitives is exceptional for anyone who has ever wanted to go on a dangerous adventure, as well as wield a great power. This is a MUST for every fantasy fanatic.

- Peter Daniel

Three Fugitives by Nat Howler is an action packed adventure, with characters that leap off the page.  Love them or hate then, you can’t help but wonder what will happen next.  Often a writer only accommodates a certain age group, but this book is written for old and young.

- Alexei Kappa

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Hey Fellow Readers! I’ve been comin across some cool stuff the past few days from a several blogs around the web which I just had to share with you. Check them out below…

Fantasy Book Critic: My Top 25 Novels of 2010 in Covers; 30 More …

With 17 more-or-less fantasy titles, 6 sf titles, 4 historical fiction titles, though three of them have also literary overtones, only Read the rest of this entry »

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Everywhere, Foes Lurk

Everywhere Foes Lurk

Six Stones Trilogy – Book 2 – By Nat Howler

In Three Fugitives, Nat Howler introduced us to thirteen-year-old Orren Randolphus, who stole a magical gwell stone from his evil half brother, Lord Berthus.  Together with his two friends, the goblin Haxel and Marett the heiress, he flees from Berthus’s thugs, taking the stone with him, and intending to find the other five of its kind before Berthus can.  The trio has faced many perils during their journey, not the least of which is the Order of Dramm, a human-sacrificing cult.  Together they have forged a unique bond of friendship that has seen them through everything.

The exciting saga of the quest for the six gwellen continues and intensifies in Everywhere, Foes Lurk. Orren and his friends have foiled Lord Berthus’s pursuit of them and have entered the Forest of Doom, where their enemies can’t find them.  They are by no means out of danger, though, for they become lost in the forest, which is home to ferocious monsters from evil days of yore.  Even if they survive, they will have to face Rivulein, a land where the Drammites are rapidly gaining supremacy.  Beyond Rivulein lies the jagged Greymantle Range, which they must cross while avoiding the dreaded Ghoul Vale.  Meanwhile, Lord Berthus is still on the rampage together with an army of new allies, and there are others, both human and non-human, who desire the magical stones for their own sinister purposes.

All is not lost for Orren and his friends, however, for they stand to gain two new allies of their own.  One is Quartz, a stone giant of immense physical strength, who owes them a debt of rescue.  The problem is that once the giant’s duty is fulfilled, he will leave them, and also, his presence creates friction in the group.  The other new ally is Anselm, a strange and wild old man who, together with his donkey, seems to appear whenever Orren and his friends are in desperate need of help.  Anselm is very interested in the gwellen, and for Orren, Haxel, and Marett, this casts serious doubts on his trustworthiness.

Orren is continuously haunted by a dream which is interpreted by the ever-knowledgeable Marett to mean that simply obtaining the gwellen will not be sufficient.  Danger lurks from unscrupulous, power-hungry individuals, both human and non-human, who seek the stones’ magic for themselves.  The quest will not be complete unless Orren and his friends can both recover the gwellen and find a safe place for them.

Book 2 is soon to be available in stores – probably mid to late 2011

Meanwhile Three Fugitives is available for sale online at Amazon.com and through additional wholesale and retail channels worldwide. Buy it for only $15 at Amazon click here
Also available as an electronic book for instant download to your smartphone, PC, Mac or e-book reader. Download it for only $9.99 at Kindle click here

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GET REAL, NAT HOWLER!!!!!!!!
Three  Fugitives by Nat Howler is one hell of a roller coaster ride.  It follows the  path of an abused boy named Orren, who travels across the wild, wild land to  find six magical stones and get them away from his big bad brother, whose name  is Berthus.
Berthus is like the biggest gangster in the medieval world and  every good-for-nothing seems to want to be part of his army.  All Orren has with  him are a goblin who trips over his own feet and a stuck up girl who thinks  she's so great cause she comes from this ancient blue blood dynasty. They meet  many obstacles on the way including a cult that thinks Orren's their  messiah.
This book's really well written.  The story's great!  It's fast paced but  there's also lots of time to get to know the characters.
On the other hand there are some things in Three Fugitives which quite  frankly drive me up the friggin' wall.
Firstly, Mr Howler, this is the 21st century and we no longer deny the  realities of human nature.  Do you honestly expect your readers to believe that  this attractive boy on the cusp of puberty with his hormones raging gets to meet  two smokin' hot chicks one after another and NOTHING HAPPENS?
And then he gets  to sleep RIGHT NEXT to the one hot chick for more than a month.  Still nothing  happens.  GET REAL!!!  You sound like an old fashioned prude not wanting to talk  about sex in your book at all.  Believe me, people in the middle ages were also  horny. I know youre trying to make it all age appropriate and stuff but in this  day and age kids are all into that kind of thing and there's nothing you can do  about it.
Second, what's with all the clean language?  I know the F-word and the  S-word when you use them too much sound cheap and corny, but why not throw a few  in there every now and then?  I mean, these guys are in deep you-know-what like  all the time and you really think they're watching their mouths?  Berthus is a  bad guy and should cuss like a sailor but he also walks around with soap in his  mouth.
Third, there's too much pious claptrap.  I like Orren a lot.  He's real  cool and smart.  I love Haxel.  But what's with this Marett character?  She may  be gorgeous, but she's a pain in the derriere with her holier than thou  religious preaching.  There's WAY too much religious preachy stuff in this book  telling people to serve the good gods and fight the bad gods.
COME ON!  I  stopped going to church 25 years ago!  I don't pick up a fantasy book so I can  read about how you must be a good obedient little follower.
Would love to read Book 2 but lets spice things up a bit and lose the  preaching.
Mike Kraekur
Schwenksville, PA
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