Publisher's Synopsis
Of Wind and Hoof and Hollow Things
Or, A Remembrance of Pan
In the fog-laced highlands of Victorian England, a newlywed couple stumbles upon something ancient - something older than God, older than myth, older than memory itself.
First glimpsed through mist and bramble, the horned figure appears at the edge of dreams, dances behind the veil of waking life, and returns with the slow, inevitable gravity of myth reborn. As the seasons turn, the sacred begins to unravel the ordinary. The wind speaks. The bells chime without source. And the great god Pan - wild, wordless, and unbound - calls once more.
Told in four parts that span mountains, markets, storms, and stillness, Of Wind and Hoof and Hollow Things is a reverent, haunting meditation on mystery, memory, and the forgotten places where wonder still lives. Written in rich, immersive Victorian prose, this is not just a story - it's a hymn to what the world once believed, and what it might still remember.
For those who've felt the sacred in wild places. For those who ache without knowing why.
The myth never died. The god never left.
He merely went where we stopped looking.