Five years have passed since Michael Pilgrim defeated ruthless Pharaoh Jacko. All goes well in Baytown. Even the Five Cities seem to have lost interest in driving 'primitives' to extinction. But storms gather . . . Michael Pilgrim is lost, hundreds of miles from home. His one a dangerous enemy. Can they survive with half Scotland baying at their heels? Seth Pilgrim is lost, a slave and an outcast. His sole reason to live is revenge. Then chance encounters challenge him to live better in a world of grotesque change. Averil Pilgrim and Helen Devereux are lost, drawn into the deranged politics of the Five Cities. Can they find their way home? PILGRIM LOST is the poetic second book in the epic Pilgrim Trilogy set in a frightening and plausible future. A world of bizarre characters blighted by humanity's folly, where hope never dies.
Tim Murgatroyd was brought up in Yorkshire. He read English at Hertford College, Oxford University, and now lives with his family in York. Tim became fascinated with Ancient China when he discovered a slim volume of Chinese poetry in a second hand bookshop.
His first novel, Taming Poison Dragons set in 12th Century China, has been described as 'a captivatingly original and unforgettable story of tragedy and enduring love'. The sequel, Breaking Bamboo, is the second instalment of a trilogy charting the trials and adventures of the Yun clan during the Mongol invasion of China. The third part of his trilogy, The Mandate of Heaven, set during the brutal Mongol occupation of China was published in October 2013.
Taming Poison Dragons and Breaking Bamboo have now been translated into Chinese by the prestigious Shanghai Literature and Arts publishing house.
In an exciting new venture, Tim will be publishing a number of new e-titles with Matador (UK) in 2017.
The Nazi’s Daughter, a haunting time-shift novel set in World War 2 and contemporary New York.
Dust of the Earth, an epic love story set in troubled 1870s California and its fascinating early wine industry.
Three e-booklets of poetry in a series called ‘Poems for Mobiles’: Lullaby, Drunk and The Stars are Apples.
Please visit Tim's website www.timmurgatroyd.co.uk for further information about the fascinating background to these novels and his poetry.