
Part of Series
Rite of passage for a young elf girl. The Wolfrider tribe has split in two. One group, led by chief Cutter, must face the ruthless Grohmul Djun to win back the crystal shards of the shattered Palace of the High Ones. The other, insurance against the grim possibility that Cutter's warriors may die, is led by Ember, daughter of a chief and now a leader in her own right. But is she up to the task? As she takes her band further and further from the lands they've known, she must prevail not only against the hazards of blind Nature, but also against creatures not of the natural worlds - monstrous minions of the evil Winnowill! (This volume reprints issues 16-22 of the Hidden Years series.)
Authors

Wendy Pini is one-half of a husband and wife team with Richard Pini that created, most notably, the Elfquest series. Wendy was born in California and adopted into the Fletcher Family in Santa Clara County. Early on, she developed as an artist and was the illustrator of her high school year book. She submitted samples of her artwork to Marvel Comics at 17 that were rejected. Pini attended Pitzer College and received her B.A. in the Arts and joined the Los Angeles Science Fiction Society. In 1972, she married Richard Pini and began illustrating science fiction magazines, including Galaxy, Galileo, and Worlds of If. In 1977, Richard and Wendy established a publishing company called Warp Graphics to publish their first Elfquest comic. Elfquest was self-published for 25 years and in 2003, licensed to DC Comics. The comic series has won several awards, including the Ed Aprill Award for Best Independent Comic, two Alley Awards, the Fantasy Festival Comic Book Awards for Best Alternative Comic, and the Golden Pen Award. Wendy has illustrated other works, including Jonny Quest in 1986, Law and Chaos in 1987, and in 1989, two graphic novels of Beauty and the Beast. Recently in 2007, she completed a graphic novel entitled The Masque of Red Death. Wendy has received several awards over the last four decades, including the San Diego Comic Convention Inkpot Award, the New York State Jaycees Distinguished Service Award, the Balrog Award for Best Artist, and was inducted into the Friends of Lulu Women Cartoonists Hall of Fame in 2002. Wendy and her husband currently reside in Poughkeepsie, New York.

Richard Pini is one-half of a husband and wife team with Wendy Pini that created, most notably, the Elfquest series. He was raised in Orange, Connecticut with his three siblings. Richard began writing science fiction stories early in his childhood. In 1972, Richard and Wendy were married after a courtship of four years. He graduated from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 1973 with a degree in Astrophysics. He worked at the Hayden Planetarium at the Museum of Science in Boston until 1975 and Taunton High School until 1979 when he began his career at IBM. In 1977, Richard and Wendy established a publishing company called Warp Graphics to publish their first Elfquest comic. Richard is credited as co-writer and editor on Elfquest, as well as handling all of the publishing and business aspects of Warp Graphics. Elfquest was self-published for 25 years and in 2003, licensed to DC Comics. The comic series has won several awards, including the Ed Aprill Award for Best Independent Comic, two Alley Awards, the Fantasy Festival Comic Book Awards for Best Alternative Comic, and the Golden Pen Award. Richard has also contributed writing for Worldpool, Futurequest, Rogue's Curse, and two Windkin stories. He has received the Small Press Writers and Artists Organization Award for Best Editor, the San Diego Comic Convention Inkpot Award, and the New York State Jaycees Distinguished Service Award. Richard and his wife currently reside in Poughkeepsie, New York.