Signe Pike is the author of The Lost Queen series, recently optioned for television, and the travel memoir Faery Tale. She has researched and written about Celtic history and folklore for over a decade. Visit her at SignePike.com.
"""[A] work of epic fantasy with ties to the Arthurian legends.""-- ""Bustle (The Books Everyone Will Be Talking About All September Long)"" ""A rich, immersive narrative founded on impeccable scholarship.""-- ""Kirkus Reviews"" ""Engrossing.""-- ""PopSugar"" ""Gripping.""-- ""Charleston Magazine"" ""Impressive historical fiction. Highly recommended.""-- ""The Historical Novel Society, Editor's Choice"" ""Her prose is quick on its feet, begging you to keep reading, joining the characters on their journeys to learn about themselves and the changing world where they live. There are passionate lovers, evil enemies and quite a few powerful women. And, like so many novels set in medieval times, The Forgotten Kingdom is anchored in the rhetoric of glorious battles, both lost and won.""-- ""Charleston City Paper"" ""Signe Pike pens a haunting, poetic origin story to the Arthurian legend, following the twisting paths of a young seer in training, a courageous queen stranded on both sides of a vicious war, and her battle-haunted brother who will someday don the mantle of Merlin. Intrigue, rivalry, and magic among the mists of old Britain--The Forgotten Kingdom is an enchantment of a read!""--Kate Quinn, New York Times bestselling author of The Alice Network ""In The Forgotten Kingdom, a dramatic and feverishly paced continuation of her Lost Queen trilogy, Signe Pike brings medieval Scottish history compellingly to life. As the narrative follows Languoreth through grueling captivity, loss of security, violent separations from loved ones and pervasive fears that shake her to the core, we learn much about loyalty, devotion, endurance and personal courage. Pike's fans will be thrilled and captivated."" --Paula Mclain, author of The Paris Wife and Love and Ruin ""In the second book of her epic trilogy of sixth-century Scotland, Pike adeptly balances brutal power struggles and Celtic mysticism... readers will relish the escape into Pike's fully developed milieu while seeing its connections to Arthurian legend grow more prominent as, among other aspects, Lailoken serves as a historical model for Merlin.""-- ""Booklist"""