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Sara Douglass
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Sara Warneke (2 July 1957 – 27 September 2011),[1] better known by her pen name Sara Douglass, was an Australian fantasy writer who lived in Hobart, Tasmania. She was a recipient of the Aurealis Award for best fantasy novel.
Key Information
Biography
[edit]A great-granddaughter of psychic Robert James Lees, Douglass was born in Penola, South Australia. She attended Annesley College, in Wayville, a suburb of Adelaide. She studied for her BA while working as a registered nurse, and later completed her PhD in early modern English History. She became a lecturer in medieval history at La Trobe University, Bendigo. While there she completed her first novel, BattleAxe, which launched her as a popular fantasy author in Australia, and later as an international success.
Until the mid-2000s, Douglass hosted a bulletin board on her website, with the aim of encouraging creative thinking and constructive criticism of others' work. She maintained an online blog about the restoration project of her house and garden entitled Notes from Nonsuch in Tasmania.[2]
In 2008, Douglass was diagnosed with ovarian cancer.[3] She underwent treatment, but in late 2010 the cancer returned.[4] She died on 27 September 2011, aged 54.[5]
Works
[edit]Fantasy fiction
[edit]Douglass mainly focused her efforts on fantasy writings. Her first trilogy, The Axis Trilogy, is set in the fantasy world of Tencendor. Of The Axis Trilogy, Enchanter and StarMan won the 1996 Aurealis Fantasy division award[6] and Battleaxe was nominated for the 1995 award.[7] Douglass's second series, The Wayfarer Redemption, two stand alone novels and her most recent series, Darkglass Mountain also focus on the fantasy world used in The Axis Trilogy. The Wayfarer Redemption also did well in the Aurealis Fantasy division with all three novels reaching the finals for their published years.[8][9][10]
In addition to the fantasy novels set in the world of Tencendor and Escator, Douglass wrote two unrelated historical fantasy series, The Crucible trilogy and The Troy Game. Some of these novels also reached the Aurealis Fantasy division finals with The Nameless Day and The Crippled Angel from The Crucible finishing as finalists[11][12] and The Wounded Hawk winning the award in 2001.[13] Hades' Daughter and Darkwitch Rising from The Troy Game also were finalists in the Fantasy division.[12][14]
Other works
[edit]Douglass also wrote a non-fiction book, The Betrayal of Arthur, and several short stories.
Bibliography
[edit]Note: In the US, and most European countries, The Axis Trilogy and The Wayfarer Redemption have been combined into one six-book series, Wayfarer Redemption.
The Axis Trilogy
[edit]In the United States, these novels were published as the first three books of the Wayfarer Redemption series.
- Battleaxe (1995) (published as The Wayfarer Redemption in the United States)
- Enchanter (1996)
- StarMan (1996)
The Wayfarer Redemption
[edit]The Crucible
[edit]- The Nameless Day (2000)
- The Wounded Hawk (2001)
- The Crippled Angel (2002)
The Troy Game
[edit]- Hades' Daughter (2002)
- Gods' Concubine (2004)
- Darkwitch Rising (2005)
- Druid's Sword (2006)
Darkglass Mountain
[edit]- The Serpent Bride (2007)
- The Twisted Citadel (2008)
- The Infinity Gate (2010)
Prequels to 'Darkglass Mountain' trilogy
- Beyond the Hanging Wall (1996) - set just prior to the events in the trilogy.
- Threshold (1997) - set approximately 2,000 years before the events in the trilogy.
Note: The Darkglass Mountain series, is a sequel to the Axis Trilogy and the Wayfarer Redemption.
Other
[edit]- The Devil's Diadem (2011)
- The Hall of Lost Footsteps (a collection of stories, Ticonderoga Publications, due 2011)
Short stories
[edit]- "Of Fingers and Foreskins" (1996) in Eidolon #21 and The Best of Australian Science Fiction and Fantasy 1996 (ed. Jonathan Strahan and Jeremy Byrne)
- "The Evil Within" (1998) in Dreaming Down-Under (ed. Janeen Webb and Jack Dann) and The Year's Best Fantasy and Horror (ed. Ellen Datlow and Terri Windling)
- "The Field of Thorns" (2000) in Australian Women's Weekly
- "St Uncumber" (2001) in Australian Women's Weekly
- "The Mistress of Marwood Hagg" (2003) in Gathering the Bones (ed. Dennis Etchison, Ramsey Campbell & Jack Dann)
- "This Way to the Exit" (2008) in Dreaming Again (ed. Jack Dann)
Non-fiction
[edit]- Images of the Educational Traveller in Early Modern England (E. J. Brill, 1995)
- The Betrayal of Arthur (1998)
Awards and nominations
[edit]Fantasy division
- Finalist: Battleaxe (1995)
- Won: Enchanter and Starman (1996) tie with Jack Dann's The Memory Cathedral
- Finalist: Sinner (1997)
- Finalist: Pilgrim (1998)
- Finalist: Crusader (1999)
- Finalist: The Nameless Day (2000)
- Won: The Wounded Hawk (2001)
- Finalist: The Crippled Angel (2002)
- Finalist: Hades' Daughter (2002)
- Finalist: Darkwitch Rising (2005)
Australian Shadows Award
[edit]- Finalist: "This Way to the Exit" (Dreaming Again, ed. Jack Dann, HarperVoyager 2008)[15]
References
[edit]- ^ "Sara Douglass". AustLit: Discover Australian Stories. The University of Queensland. Retrieved 21 February 2024.
- ^ "Notes from Nonsuch in Tasmania"
- ^ Australian fantasy writer Sara Douglass dies of ovarian cancer
- ^ Douglass' writings about dying
- ^ Chapman, Jennifer (27 September 2011). "Australian fantasy writer Sara Douglass dies of ovarian cancer". heraldsun.com.au. Retrieved 27 September 2011.
- ^ "1996 Aurealis Awards". The Locus Index to SF Awards. Retrieved 7 August 2008.
- ^ "1995 Aurealis Awards". The Locus Index to SF Awards. Retrieved 7 August 2008.
- ^ "1997 Aurealis Awards". The Locus Index to SF Awards. Retrieved 7 August 2008.
- ^ "1998 Aurealis Awards". The Locus Index to SF Awards. Retrieved 7 August 2008.
- ^ "1999 Aurealis Awards". The Locus Index to SF Awards. Retrieved 7 August 2008.
- ^ "2000 Aurealis Awards". The Locus Index to SF Awards. Retrieved 7 August 2008.
- ^ a b "2003 Aurealis Awards". The Locus Index to SF Awards. Retrieved 7 August 2008.
- ^ "2001 Aurealis Awards". The Locus Index to SF Awards. Retrieved 7 August 2008.
- ^ "2005 Aurealis Awards". The Locus Index to SF Awards. Retrieved 7 August 2008.
- ^ "2008 Australian Shadows Award". Australian Horror Writers Association. 13 February 2008. Retrieved 14 February 2009.
External links
[edit]- Archive of official website at the Wayback Machine (archived 2006-02-02)
- Sara's home at Nonsuch
- Interview with Sara Douglass at SFFWorld.com
- Sara Douglass at the Internet Speculative Fiction Database
- Works by Sara Douglass at Open Library
Sara Douglass
View on GrokipediaBiography
Early life and education
Sara Douglass was born Sara Warneke on 2 July 1957 in Penola, South Australia, to Bob Warneke, a sheep farmer and health and weeds inspector, and his wife Elinor.[4][5] She was a descendant of the 19th-century spiritualist Robert James Lees. She grew up with two older sisters and an older brother on the family sheep farm called Gundealga, located about 25 miles outside Penola.[6][7] Her early childhood was shaped by rural life in South Australia, where she spent her first seven years on the farm, engaging in activities like chasing sheep and exploring the countryside, which fostered a deep connection to the land.[2][6] The family later moved to Adelaide, where Douglass lived in a Victorian house in the suburb of Malvern, surrounded by books that sparked her lifelong interest in history and literature.[6] She attended Methodist Ladies College in Adelaide during her schooling years.[5] Following high school, Douglass trained and worked as a registered nurse for 17 years, a family tradition, while pursuing higher education part-time.[8] She completed a Bachelor of Arts degree at the University of Adelaide during this period.[8][9] Later, she earned a PhD in early modern English history from the same university in 1991, with her research emphasizing historical methods and drawing on themes from medieval and early modern periods.[5][7][6]Academic career
Sara Douglass, under her real name Sara Warneke, served as a lecturer in medieval history at the Bendigo campus of La Trobe University in central Victoria, Australia, beginning in 1992 following the completion of her PhD.[6] Her role involved teaching undergraduate and postgraduate courses on medieval European history, where she emphasized the cultural and social dynamics of the period, drawing on her extensive knowledge of historical narratives.[2] During this time, she advanced to senior lecturer, managing departmental responsibilities amid the challenges of academic politics, which she later described as a significant source of stress.[10] Douglass's research primarily centered on early modern English history, particularly the perceptions and representations of travel and education in 16th- and 17th-century England. Her scholarly work culminated in the 1995 publication of Images of the Educational Traveller in Early Modern England, a book that examined how English writers and artists depicted young men undertaking the Grand Tour for educational purposes, highlighting themes of cultural exchange, moral risks, and national identity.[11] This monograph, published by Brill as part of their Studies in Intellectual History series, reflected her deep archival research into period literature and visual sources, establishing her as a contributor to the historiography of early modern travel.[5] Throughout her academic tenure, Douglass balanced lecturing and research with her burgeoning interest in creative writing, using fiction as an outlet from the rigors of university life. She began drafting her debut novel while at La Trobe, integrating historical insights from her expertise into fantasy narratives that explored medieval-inspired themes. This dual pursuit informed her approach to storytelling, though academic demands limited her output until the mid-1990s. In 1995, following the publication and commercial success of her first novel, BattleAxe, she resigned from her position to focus on writing full-time, marking the end of her formal academic career.[6][2]Writing career
Sara Douglass entered the fantasy genre with the publication of her debut novel, BattleAxe, in 1995 under the HarperCollins Voyager imprint, which established her as one of Australia's pioneering authors in the field.[12] The book's immediate popularity in Australia prompted rapid career advancement, including contracts for multiple fantasy series that solidified her reputation as a prolific writer.[6] Between 1995 and 2011, Douglass published 19 books of epic and historical fantasy exclusively with Voyager, transitioning fully to authorship after resigning from her academic position.[12] In 2005, she relocated to Hobart, Tasmania, to dedicate herself to writing full-time, where she restored a historic property that became central to her personal and creative life.[4][13] To engage with her growing readership, Douglass maintained an online creative bulletin board and launched the blog Notes from Nonsuch, sharing updates on her restoration projects and fostering direct fan interactions through email and digital forums.[4] Over time, her style matured to weave in rich historical and mythological elements, informed by her expertise in medieval history, while her works expanded internationally, achieving sales worldwide and translations into multiple languages.[2][10]Illness and death
In 2008, Sara Douglass was diagnosed with ovarian cancer while residing in Hobart, Tasmania. She underwent successful treatment that year, achieving remission and enabling her to complete her final novel series, Darkglass Mountain, with the publication of The Infinity Gate in June 2010.[14][15] The cancer recurred in late 2010, prompting ongoing treatment in Hobart, where Douglass had made her home after an earlier marriage that had ended. During this period, she was supported by close friends, including author Karen Brooks and her husband Stephen, who served as her primary carers amid her declining health.[1][4][5] Douglass died on 27 September 2011 at the age of 54 in a Hobart hospice. Her passing prompted widespread tributes from publishers, including HarperCollins, and fans, shared through her personal blog "Notes from Nonsuch" and various online forums, reflecting on her openness about her illness in poignant essays.[16][17][18]Literary works
Fantasy series
Sara Douglass's literary output primarily centered on epic fantasy, where she wove intricate narratives drawing from global mythology, historical events, and subtle Australian cultural elements across five major interconnected series.[10][19] Her works often incorporated motifs from medieval epics and ancient legends, reimagined in expansive worlds that reflected her background as a historian of early modern England, while infusing Australian landscapes and place names to ground the fantastical in a sense of place.[20] This blend created richly layered tales emphasizing moral complexity, forbidden desires, and the interplay between human ambition and cosmic forces.[10] The series exhibit significant interconnections, forming a broader shared universe that rewards readers with recurring motifs and expansive lore. For instance, the foundational Axis Trilogy serves as the narrative core for the subsequent Wayfarer Redemption series, extending its conflicts and characters into new arcs, while the Darkglass Mountain series functions as both prequel and sequel, delving into origins and aftermaths within the same cosmology.[21] Similarly, elements from the Crucible and Troy Game series echo across this framework, linking mythological retellings to the central Tencendor world through shared prophecies and lingering threats.[22] This interconnected structure allows Douglass to build upon earlier resolutions, creating a cumulative epic that spans generations and realms.[20] Structurally, Douglass's series typically unfold in multi-book arcs of three to six volumes, centered on heroic quests against existential perils, supported by innovative magical systems rooted in natural and celestial elements. Magic often derives from stellar forces, ancient arboreal networks symbolizing life and growth, and binding prophecies that dictate fates and unite disparate races.[23] These systems emphasize harmony between the earthly and divine, with protagonists navigating enchanted landscapes where trees serve as conduits for power and stars guide prophetic visions.[24] Quests drive the plots, involving alliances across feuding peoples and confrontations with embodiment-of-evil entities, all while critiquing themes like religious dogma and power's corrupting influence.[22] Douglass's fantasy worlds evolved notably over her career, transitioning from the medieval-inspired, continent-bound settings of her early series—evoking feudal hierarchies and chivalric quests—to the more labyrinthine, multi-realm narratives in later works. The Crucible series, for example, expands into alternate historical-mythological planes, reinterpreting biblical and classical lore in fluid, interconnected dimensions, while The Troy Game delves into labyrinthine underworlds and eternal cycles of reincarnation.[20] This progression reflects her growing ambition, incorporating darker psychological depths and broader cosmological scopes, influenced by her academic expertise in historical reinterpretation.[19]Standalone novels and short fiction
Sara Douglass's standalone novels represent a distinct facet of her fantasy oeuvre, often blending intricate world-building with personal narratives that explore themes of power, hidden abilities, and societal upheaval. These works, while occasionally serving as entry points to her larger series, were crafted to be self-contained, allowing readers to engage with her mythic universes without prior commitment to multi-volume arcs. Her approach in these novels frequently incorporates elements of historical or mythological inspiration, grounding fantastical elements in richly detailed settings that evoke ancient civilizations or medieval Europe.[25][26] One of her earliest standalone efforts, Threshold (1997), is set in the arid kingdom of Ashdod, reminiscent of ancient Egypt, where the ruling Magi construct a colossal pyramid known as Threshold to bridge the mortal realm and the divine Infinity. The story centers on Tirzah, a enslaved glassworker who possesses a rare affinity for communicating with glass, enabling her to uncover conspiracies and harness latent powers amid rising tensions between the theocratic elite and suppressed underclasses. This novel delves into motifs of forbidden knowledge and rebellion, culminating in a cataclysmic confrontation that reshapes the land's spiritual landscape. Although it later connects to Douglass's Crucible series, its narrative resolves independently, emphasizing Tirzah's transformative journey.[27][25] Similarly, Beyond the Hanging Wall (1996), unfolds in the coastal realm of Escator, where young apprentice healer Garth Baxtor inherits an amplified version of "the Touch"—a gift for sensing and alleviating inner turmoil through physical contact. Tasked with examining prisoners in the perilous gloam mines beneath the Hanging Wall, Garth encounters a mysterious convict whose secrets unravel a web of royal intrigue, magical suppression, and the kingdom's exploitative underbelly. The novel examines the burdens of empathy and the collision between personal morality and institutional corruption, with Garth's discoveries leading to a quest for truth that challenges Escator's foundations. Like Threshold, it stands alone while subtly linking to the broader Wayfarer Redemption cosmos through shared lore.[28][26] In a later phase of her career, Douglass ventured into historical fantasy with The Devil's Diadem (2011), her final standalone novel, set against the backdrop of 12th-century England during a devastating plague. Protagonist Maeb Langtofte, a noblewoman serving in a powerful earl's household, navigates political alliances, forbidden romance, and supernatural horrors as the pestilence—implied to stem from a demonic artifact stolen by a monk—ravages society. The story weaves authentic medieval customs with infernal mythology, portraying Maeb's evolution from passive observer to active resistor against otherworldly forces. This work highlights Douglass's ability to fuse historical verisimilitude with speculative dread, creating a tense exploration of faith, survival, and the blurred line between human and diabolic agency.[29][30] Douglass's contributions to short fiction, though less prolific than her novels, often infused fantasy with subtle horror and psychological depth, appearing in prestigious anthologies and periodicals. Notable examples include "Of Fingers and Foreskins" (1996), published in Eidolon, which probes ritualistic taboos through a lens of mythic unease; "The Evil Within" (1998), delving into internal malevolence in a speculative framework; and "The Field of Thorns" (2000), evoking isolation and peril in a thorn-choked wasteland. Later, "St Uncumber" (2001) reimagines saintly legends with dark twists on gender and sacrifice. Her story "This Way to the Exit" (2008), featured in Jack Dann's Dreaming Again, transports readers to London's subterranean tunnels, where construction unearths eerie disappearances and ancient entities, blending urban horror with fantastical intrusion in a concise, atmospheric tale. These pieces underscore Douglass's versatility in compact forms, frequently employing horror-tinged fantasy to interrogate human vulnerability and the uncanny.[31][32] Despite her affinity for expansive epics, Douglass's standalone works and shorts reveal a preference for interconnected mythologies, where even isolated stories hint at larger tapestries, reflecting her overarching vision of worlds in perpetual flux. This scarcity of purely disconnected narratives aligns with her epic scope, yet these selections offer accessible portals into her imaginative realms.[28][31]Non-fiction
Sara Douglass, writing under her birth name Sara Warneke for academic publications, produced limited but significant non-fiction works rooted in her expertise in early modern and medieval history. Her first major scholarly book, Images of the Educational Traveller in Early Modern England, was published in 1995 by Brill and derived directly from her PhD research, which examined travel narratives and the cultural perceptions of educational journeys in England from the sixteenth to seventeenth centuries.[11] The work analyzes how travel served as a formative experience for young elites, drawing on primary sources like letters and conduct books to explore themes of identity, knowledge acquisition, and social mobility in the period.[33] In 1999, Douglass published The Betrayal of Arthur under her pen name through Pan Macmillan Australia, a scholarly exploration of Arthurian legend that delves into its historical origins, literary evolutions, and recurring motifs of betrayal from medieval texts to modern interpretations.[34] Leveraging her background in medieval studies, the book traces the legend's development through sources such as Geoffrey of Monmouth's Historia Regum Britanniae and Thomas Malory's Le Morte d'Arthur, emphasizing how betrayals—personal, political, and mythic—shaped the narrative's enduring appeal and reflected twelfth-century societal anxieties. This analysis highlighted the interplay between history and myth in Arthurian lore, connecting literary betrayals to broader themes of power and loyalty in medieval Europe.[35] Douglass's non-fiction scholarship, particularly her examination of Arthurian betrayals, informed the historical depth and mythic elements in her subsequent fantasy writing, such as the Arthurian motifs woven into The Troy Game series, where ancient legends intersect with British history without direct plot retellings.[22] Following The Betrayal of Arthur, she produced no further non-fiction, redirecting her efforts toward expansive fantasy novels that drew on her historical knowledge for authenticity and thematic richness.[4]Bibliography
The Axis Trilogy
The Axis Trilogy is Sara Douglass's debut fantasy series, published in Australia by HarperCollins, introducing a richly imagined world of Tencendor where ancient prophecies and mystical forces drive the narrative.[31] The trilogy centers on a prophecy-driven quest in a medieval-inspired setting, featuring elements of star-based magic drawn from the Icarii race's connection to the stars, and establishes the foundational lore for Douglass's broader fictional universe.[36][37] The first book, BattleAxe, was originally published in 1995 and reissued in the United States as The Wayfarer Redemption by Tor Books. It lays the groundwork for the series' exploration of unity among diverse races amid looming threats.[36] The second installment, Enchanter, followed in 1996, deepening the magical and political intricacies of the world introduced in the opener. The trilogy concludes with StarMan, also published in 1996, resolving the central quest while highlighting the interplay of prophecy and celestial magic. This series serves as the origin for the expanded narrative in The Wayfarer Redemption trilogy.[31]The Wayfarer Redemption
The Wayfarer Redemption trilogy by Sara Douglass extends the epic fantasy narrative established in her preceding Axis Trilogy, shifting focus to the consequences of past events in the realm of Tencendor while emphasizing character redemption and escalating cosmic confrontations between divine and demonic entities. Published originally by HarperCollins in Australia, the trilogy comprises three novels released between 1997 and 1999. In certain international editions, particularly those from Tor Books in the United States, the Axis Trilogy is integrated as volumes 1–3 of the broader Wayfarer Redemption series, positioning these sequel volumes as 4–6 to form a cohesive six-book saga.[38] The opening volume, Sinner, appeared in 1997 and centers on the enigmatic figure of the Sinner, a woman burdened by a prophetic role tied to the bloodlines of ancient powers, as she navigates alliances and betrayals amid brewing celestial wars. This installment reintroduces elements from the Axis Trilogy's conclusion, propelling the plot toward redemptive quests that challenge the protagonists' moral legacies.[39] Pilgrim, the second book, followed in 1998 and intensifies the cosmic battles, following a group of wanderers—including descendants of prior heroes—who undertake a perilous journey across transformed landscapes to confront otherworldly invaders threatening Tencendor's fragile peace. The narrative highlights redemption through personal sacrifices and the forging of unlikely bonds, as characters grapple with the lingering shadows of divine prophecies.[40] The trilogy concludes with Crusader in 1999, where the scale of conflict reaches apocalyptic proportions, pitting redeemed warriors against a coalition of demonic forces in a bid to restore balance to the stars. This final volume resolves key redemption arcs by intertwining individual atonement with the fate of entire worlds, culminating in grand-scale cosmic confrontations that echo the series' foundational myths.[41]The Crucible
The Crucible is a trilogy of historical fantasy novels by Sara Douglass, published between 2000 and 2002, that reimagines key events in 14th-century England amid a supernatural war between angels and demons vying for control over human souls and free will.[42] The series blends meticulously researched medieval history with elements of Christian mythology, portraying the Black Death, political upheavals, and religious conflicts as battlegrounds for celestial forces.[43] Central to the narrative is Brother Thomas Neville, a Dominican friar turned warrior-priest, who receives visions from the Archangel Michael and grapples with demonic incursions disguised among humanity.[44] The trilogy unfolds across three volumes, each advancing the cosmic struggle while anchoring it in historical figures and events such as the Peasants' Revolt and the Wars of the Roses:- The Nameless Day (2000), the opening installment, depicts the onset of the Black Plague in Europe as a portal for demonic invasion, forcing Neville to confront otherworldly visitations amid widespread devastation.[45][44]
- The Wounded Hawk (2001) shifts focus to the recovery period following the plague, where Neville pursues shape-shifting demons infiltrating English society and royal courts, escalating the heavenly conflict.[46][47]
- The Crippled Angel (2002) culminates in the late 14th century with Neville's final mission to expose high-placed demons, including suspicions surrounding King Henry IV, as angelic and demonic armies converge on humanity's fate.[42][48]
The Troy Game
The Troy Game is a four-volume historical fantasy series by Sara Douglass, published between 2002 and 2006, that reimagines Greek mythology through the lens of an eternal, labyrinthine game orchestrated by the gods, drawing in reincarnated Trojan warriors, divine figures, and historical personages across epochs from ancient Greece to World War II-era London.[49] The central framework revolves around the Troy Game, a magical labyrinthine structure symbolizing power and protection, initiated in the wake of the Trojan War's fall; its incomplete construction traps participants in cycles of death and rebirth, as they vie to either complete or dismantle it amid vengeful deities and shifting historical landscapes.[31] This eternal contest blends myth with real-world events, emphasizing themes of betrayal, ambition, and the interplay between mortal agency and divine machinations, while briefly incorporating elements of Arthurian lore derived from Douglass's scholarly explorations of medieval legends.[49] The series opens with Hades' Daughter (2002), where the spurned princess Ariadne, daughter of King Minos of Crete, unleashes a curse following Theseus's abandonment in the labyrinth, setting off a chain of divine retribution that culminates in the sack of Troy; Trojan prince Brutus, guided by a prophetic vision, leads survivors eastward to a mystical green isle (ancient Britain), only to confront vengeful forces including a descendant of Ariadne intent on thwarting his quest to rebuild a new Troy.[50][31] In God's Concubine (2003), Brutus arrives in Albion with remnants of Troy, seeking to forge a new kingdom by constructing a grand labyrinth to harness ancient powers, but faces opposition from his reluctant wife Cornelia and a seductive sorceress tied to the old magic of the land; as betrayals unfold across a millennium, the narrative shifts through reincarnations, from ancient migrations to medieval England, foreshadowing the labyrinth's role in future cataclysms like the impending dark visions of 1939 London.[51][31] Darkwitch Rising (2005) advances to 17th-century England amid civil war and plague under Charles II, where reincarnated figures—including Brutus as a royal courtier, Cornelia reborn as Noah Banks, and the sorceress Genvissa as a streetwise prostitute—converge to revive the stalled Troy Game; the labyrinth, now intertwined with the Tower of London in a faerie-touched realm, awakens malevolent forces, compelling the players to navigate alliances with fae entities and unravel the game's escalating threats to Britain's soul.[52][31] The concluding volume, Druid's Sword (2006), unfolds during the 1940 Blitz over London, with Brutus resurrected as an American military major amid the chaos of German bombings; joined by his eternal companions, he pursues the labyrinth's final completion to end the Troy Game and liberate trapped souls, but a emergent supernatural power with its own destructive aims forces a climactic confrontation that could reshape the world beyond the game's ancient origins.[53][31]Darkglass Mountain
The Darkglass Mountain series comprises Sara Douglass's concluding major fantasy trilogy, published between 2007 and 2010, and set in a distinct world separate from her earlier star-god universe. The trilogy centers on political intrigue, ancient prophecies, and existential threats in the lands of Escator and beyond, weaving together human, divine, and otherworldly forces. It features the protagonist Ishbel Brunelle, a former priestess of a serpent cult, who marries King Maximilian of Escator amid rising dangers from eldritch entities and a malevolent pyramid known as DarkGlass Mountain.[54][55] The first volume, The Serpent Bride (2007), introduces the core conflict as Ishbel navigates her new role while shadowy forces, including the imprisoned chaos entity Kanubai, begin to stir. The second, The Twisted Citadel (2008), escalates the peril with the activation of DarkGlass Mountain, a colossal structure that manipulates reality and absorbs power. The trilogy culminates in The Infinity Gate (2010), where alliances fracture and the fate of multiple realms hangs in the balance as protagonists confront the pyramid's full awakening.[56][57][58] Central to the series is a novel magical system predicated on glass, which serves as a conduit for power, transformation, and otherworldly invasion; DarkGlass Mountain itself is depicted as a sentient glass pyramid capable of turning substances to flesh and bridging dimensions. This system contrasts with Douglass's prior works by emphasizing brittle, reflective mediums over organic or celestial magics, and it intertwines with faerie realms inhabited by enigmatic, nature-bound beings that influence mortal affairs. The prequels Beyond the Hanging Wall (1996) and Threshold (1997) establish foundational elements, including the origins of key characters like Maximilian and the inherent power within glass, foreshadowing the trilogy's cataclysmic events.[59][60][61][62] Douglass completed the series despite her ovarian cancer diagnosis in 2008 and its recurrence in 2010, with The Infinity Gate released shortly before her health sharply declined.[1]Other works
Short fiction
Sara Douglass contributed several short stories to anthologies and online publications, distinct from her major fantasy series, with many later collected in her anthology The Hall of Lost Footsteps (Ticonderoga Publications, 2011).[63] This volume includes all of her short fiction, comprising fourteen pieces, two of which—"Black Heart" and the title story—were original to the collection.[31] Notable standalone short stories include:- "Of Fingers and Foreskins" (1996), published in the Arthurian anthology The Betrayal of Arthur, edited by John Matthews.[31]
- "The Evil Within" (1998).[31]
- "The Field of Thorns" (2000).[31]
- "St Uncumber" (2001).[31]
- "The Tower Room" (date unknown, collected 2011).[64]
- "This Way to the Exit" (2008), a horror-fantasy tale appearing in the anthology Dreaming Again, edited by Jack Dann.[31]
- "The Mistress of Marwood" (date unknown, collected 2011).[64]
- "Black Heart" (2011).[31]
- "The Hall of Lost Footsteps" (2011).[31]
Non-fiction
Under her real name Sara Warneke, Douglass published scholarly works related to her academic career in history:- Images of the Educational Traveller in Early Modern England (E. J. Brill, 1995).
- The Betrayal of Arthur (1998), an edited anthology of Arthurian fiction.
