The Chasseen Legends
Mount Pavin, now Lake Pavin, in the Chaine des Puys mountain range in present-day southern France erupted in 4040BC.
Warfare, a clash of egos, guilt, trauma, beer. Some things haven't changed much in 6000 years.
The story follows one of the first families who transition from hunter-gatherers to farmers in southern France. You're propelled through the lives of five generations of a family from mountainous hunters to plains farmers. The realistic backdrop took years of research, however, the drama and suspense in the family as they journey through this time period at the end of the Stone Age is the driving force of the trilogy.
If you're looking for books with ancient settings, epic adventures and exciting heroics, then The Chasseen Legends will delight you!
These were not cave dwellers and Jean Auel's Ice Age adventures ended centuries ago. This was the Neolithic
Age, when the earth was lush and beautiful, full of birds and animals, but not many people.
The Chasseen Legends: Ancient Blood
This is the first book in the saga of a family living in the real world of 6000 years ago. Busher and Treaulee have two sons. When the sons grow up, Ashland, the driven son, wants to be a planter. Everything must relate to his goal of establishing an ideal farming community. Dubnoald, his younger brother, wants the old ways of his hunter ancestors. Their sister tries to hold the family together, but each time she pulls her brothers together - they clash. When hunter clans attack, will the brothers join forces or will they all perish in this brutal and sparsely populated world?
Click to go to Amazon to Purchase: Ancient Blood
The Chasseen Legends: Witch's Shroud
This is the second book in the saga. Older brother, Ashland, and his son guide the village toward farming. Younger brother, Dubnoald, and his son want to return to hunting. The two sons grow up in the shadow of their father's desires, swearing to uphold the decisions of their fathers. However, only one of the sons will inherit control of the village. Adding to the drama, a warrioress, and a high priestess, also compete to take the reins. Who's helping whom?
Click to go to Amazon to Purchase: Witch's Shroud
The Chasseen Legends: Lost Shadows
This is the third book in the series. It was chosen as a finalist for the Page Turner Award 2021. The quarreling sons are gone. It's peaceful and Fawn is quite comfortable with her mundane existence in her little village… until it vanished! Now she's forced to battle slavers, a friend's crippling injury and a feuding blood oath for revenge. Not to mention the monster that follows them! Fawn and her friends must endure a perilous journey to find another farming village in the harsh Stone Age world in which they live. Can they find it? Things turn deadly because someone is trying to punish them. Who is it and why are they doing it? Can they find out before they're driven back into the wilderness to die?
Click to go to Amazon to Purchase: Lost Shadows
The Chasseen Legends Suite:
Acorns To Spelt Music
This music is written to accompany the book series.
The Chasseen were hunter-gatherers who began farming in southern France 6000 years ago, near the end of
the stone-age.
The four movements, over eight minutes of music, are written to mimic the primitive
instruments and vocals available at the time. However, the upbeat, inspiring music is a modern
representation of what was possible with the various sounds they could make.
The first movement: Plant and Harvest
Women were the ones who started growing crops. Instead of risking confrontations with other clans or with
wild animals, they began planting near their huts. These grew into large self-sufficient gardens. Once the
men realized the advantages of living near their food supply, they began planting in earnest and moved
from vegetable gardens to farming.
The second movement: Ceremony and Dance
The Chasseen talked to their gods through music and participated in religious ceremonies attended by vast
numbers of clans from hundreds of miles around. It was a place to mingle and find mates. Drums got the
attention ofthe gods and bird-like calls, tweets and songs talked to the gods. Since the gods were in the
sky and birds flew in the sky, obviously, birds talked to the gods. Thus the Chasseent ried to sound like
birds by fluttering, chirping and other noises. The drums began at a resting heart-rate and progressed to
a faster pace. Then the bone and reed flutes took over at a running heart-rate and the people sang and
chirped their messages to the gods.
The third movement: Through the Woods
There was a great deal of travel in 4000BC. Trading routes abound all across western Europe and grew into
well-worn paths for everyone. Travelers had to endure rugged terrain, deluges and roving bands of bandits.
These routes were used for getting to the massive religious celebrations, moving from exhausted soil to
virgin ground and bringing innovations to scattered clans. Everyone traveled through the woods.
The forth movement: Winter and Repose
Chasseen winters were cold though not usually freezing.This allowed for a respite from planting, weeding
and reaping, but not from farm labor. Tool repair, weaving and rope making filled the shortened days until
spring.
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