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Seeds of Fire

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Autumn Bradley used the magic in her hands to save Ursula Columbine from the darkness that hunts for her. But the ordeal of her rescue has left Ursula's mind blank and her powers dimmed. Autumn only knows that it is up to her to hide the defenseless Ursula.Darkness has spilled into Kelly Dove's life. She will use all her strength, no matter the cost to anyone, for what her dreams seem to promise: Ursula hers again.

Taylor St. Claire risked faith and spirit to save Ursula but failed. No longer cleric, no longer priestess, Taylor's bitterness threatens to consume her completely. From the ancient music that haunts them all comes a clue in the search for Ursula, and Kelly seems only too eager to help. But the face of Ursula's captor is not the woman Taylor expects.

The second volume of the Tunnel of Light trilogy continues the explosive journey of passion, heartbreak and triumph.

260 pages, Paperback

First published June 15, 2002

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About the author

Laura Adams

6 books4 followers
Librarian note:
There is more than one author in the GoodReads database with this name


Alternative name used by Karin Kallmaker , author of lesbian fiction

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Profile Image for Yaaresse.
2,157 reviews16 followers
May 9, 2016
Seeds of Fire is the second in a what was supposed to be a trilogy. It is a time-slip fantasy involving the legend of St. Ursula.

As I said about the first book, I think this series wasn't given the wider attention it deserved because it's marketed as a lesbian novel. Ok, so yes, the main characters are lesbian and there is lesbian sex galore -- so if you're freaked out by the reality of the world that you share the planet with gay people who have friends and lovers who are also gay people, better to leave this one on the shelf to avoid jarring that little fantasy you're already living in. But it's primarily a damn good story. Write a damn good story with interesting conflicts and strong, dynamic characters, and I don't care if those characters are gay, straight, bi, asexual or self-replicating. My point is that I wouldn't have ever known this series existed except I have a couple LGBT friends who knew that I love me a good time-travel story.

Unfortunately, I think we're never going to find out how the series ends. I respect Kallmaker for not just churning out the third book half-hardheartedly just for a paycheck, but some closure would be nice. The only information I could find on-line is a 2007 blog entry where she indicated that The Muse was on strike. Given that it's now been eight years and she's written a lot of other books (looks like mostly romance or erotica) since then, I'm thinking The Muse has been declared dead. Too bad.
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