Samuel DenHartog's Blog: The Road to 1,440 - Posts Tagged "germany"

Unraveling Time, Elemental Power, and Sisterhood in "The Forgotten Coven"

After all the buildup, the story finally continues. In this latest installment, our four witches leave behind the familiar streets of East Haven and step into a fractured past where magic still lingers in stone and silence. The riverbank, once a place of quiet reflection, becomes the entry point into something far older. They find themselves in Alexandria during the last days of its great Library, where a secret coven entrusts them with a task only they can complete.

Each girl is pulled into a different thread of time and place. Laurel walks among the firekeepers of ancient Ireland. Susie finds herself in a village ruled by fear during the witch trials of England. Blanca witnesses the fall of a kingdom in Spain as earth magic slips beneath the soil. Andrea follows the wind into the depths of the Black Forest, where superstition and truth twist together. These chapters test who these girls are becoming and ask who they are willing to be.

The heart of this story lives in the way the past speaks to the present. Each setting reveals something elemental about the girls, both in terms of their magic and their character. The history they walk through is not static. It asks for something in return. It demands courage, honesty, and sometimes loss. As they recover the ancient texts, what they truly gather is a deeper sense of what legacy means and how much power lives in what we choose to carry forward.

Back in East Haven, life seems unchanged. But under the stillness, something new stirs. The girls have brought more than magic back with them. They carry memory, responsibility, and a bond shaped by everything they had to survive alone. In the quiet moments after the final page, that feeling lingers. The sense that what was lost has only been waiting to return. And now it has.
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Published on August 21, 2025 17:04 Tags: coming-of-age, contemporary, coven, elemental, england, fantasy, germany, ireland, magic, spain, teen, time-travel, witch, witches

From Gingerbread Houses to Enchanted Towers in "Fables from Germany"

When I first began gathering these stories, I was struck by how many of them felt like they had been with me all along. Hansel and Gretel, with its gingerbread house deep in the woods, or Snow White, with the poisoned apple and the seven dwarfs, are tales so woven into our culture that they almost live in memory before we even hear them. Bringing them together again reminded me how powerful the imagery is, and how these German tales have shaped the idea of fairy tales around the world.

At the same time, there is so much more to discover beyond the famous names. The Twelve Dancing Princesses with its underground palace, The Six Swans with its quiet devotion, and The Goose Girl with its tale of betrayal and justice, all carry a richness that deserves to be remembered. Reading them alongside the better-known stories gives a sense of the wide tapestry of imagination that the Brothers Grimm collected. Each tale feels both rustic and magical, grounded in forests, cottages, and villages yet glowing with enchantment.

What I especially love is the variety of moods. Some stories sparkle with humor, like The Golden Goose with its parade of people stuck together, or Hans in Luck, where a boy keeps trading away his fortune and insists he is happier each time. Others are darker, like The Juniper Tree or The Robber Bridegroom, with their grim turns and haunting images. That mixture of light and shadow makes the whole collection feel alive, like walking through a forest where every path holds something different.

This book is a gathering of fourty-five tales, chosen to give both the comfort of the classics and the surprise of hidden gems. Some will feel like meeting an old friend, while others may come as a first encounter with a story just as worthy of being cherished. Together, they show why German folklore has captured hearts for centuries and why these tales remain as enchanting today as when they were first told. "Fables from Germany" is an invitation to wander into those woods again and see what you find.
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Published on September 14, 2025 07:41 Tags: brothers-grimm, fables, fairy-tales, folk-tales, germany, gretel, hansel, legends, snow-white, tales, witches

The Road to 1,440

Samuel DenHartog
I'm Samuel DenHartog, and at 51, at the end of November of 2023, I've embarked on a remarkable journey as a writer. My diverse background in computer programming, video game development, and film prod ...more
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