Are you a fan of fantasy novels? If so, you'll love The Princess Galva Book.The Princess Galva is a must-read for all fantasy lovers. It tells the story of Galva, a young princess who is taken prisoner by a dragon. The dragon, Galva, is actually a princess who has been turned into a dragon by a wicked sorcerer. Galva is taken to the land of the Dragons where she must help the other dragons fight the sorcerer. With the help of her friends, she must find a way to escape and save her kingdom. Along the way, Galva learns about friendship, love, and what it means to be a dragon.When he was abruptly fired, Edward Povey had worked as a correspondence clerk for twenty-two years. How, then, did he come to be entangled with an orphan girl who was actually a princess who was attempting to recover her kingdom from the guy who had murdered her parents? Whatever the circumstances, it was romantic.Readers will thoroughly enjoy this book. It's a great story with plenty of twists and turns.
David Whitelaw was born to Hannah Baxter and David Whitelaw in Holloway, Islington, which was then part of Middlesex. His grandparents, Theodore and Eliza Baxter, members of the North London branch of the Sandemanian church, raised him and his older brother Stephen (1873 - 1936) after the death of both of their parents when they were both infants. Following brief stays in New York City and Paris in the 1890s, Whitelaw returned to London to work as an illustrator and journalist for a number of Fleet Street publications. He subsequently rose to the position of editor of The London Magazine and The Premier Magazine. Between 1914 and 1931, the Amalgamated Press's The Premier Magazine, which was housed at Fleetway House in Farringdon, London, produced atmospheric fiction including action and mystery writers like Edgar Wallace. He created the spelling card game Lexicon in 1932, which became very famous all over the world. In his lifetime, he published more than 50 books, and The Thriller magazine also ran serial versions of his stories. His first book, "M'Stodger's Affinity," was released in 1896, and a string of romantic suspense novels followed. Many of his works were translated into various languages and were published in multiple editions.