• Home
  • About the Series
    • Concept & Author
    • Book Reviews & Articles
    • Interviews & Appearances
    • Mountain Folk Video Guide
    • Forest Folk Video Guide
    • Water Folk Video Guide
    • Author’s Blog
  • Tales in the Series
    • Book One: Mountain Folk
    • Book Two: Forest Folk
    • Book Three: Water Folk
    • Novelette-The Bard
    • Novelette-The Pixie Light
    • Novelette-The Giant
  • Shop
  • More
    • Home
    • About the Series
      • Concept & Author
      • Book Reviews & Articles
      • Interviews & Appearances
      • Mountain Folk Video Guide
      • Forest Folk Video Guide
      • Water Folk Video Guide
      • Author’s Blog
    • Tales in the Series
      • Book One: Mountain Folk
      • Book Two: Forest Folk
      • Book Three: Water Folk
      • Novelette-The Bard
      • Novelette-The Pixie Light
      • Novelette-The Giant
    • Shop
  • Sign In
  • Create Account

  • Orders
  • My Account
  • Signed in as:

  • filler@godaddy.com


  • Orders
  • My Account
  • Sign out

Signed in as:

filler@godaddy.com

  • Home
  • About the Series
    • Concept & Author
    • Book Reviews & Articles
    • Interviews & Appearances
    • Mountain Folk Video Guide
    • Forest Folk Video Guide
    • Water Folk Video Guide
    • Author’s Blog
  • Tales in the Series
    • Book One: Mountain Folk
    • Book Two: Forest Folk
    • Book Three: Water Folk
    • Novelette-The Bard
    • Novelette-The Pixie Light
    • Novelette-The Giant
  • Shop

Account


  • Orders
  • My Account
  • Sign out


  • Sign In
  • Orders
  • My Account
The Folklore Cycle
Shop Now

    Scoops and Scribbles

    Moving Pictures

    TV Coverage: “A Novel Idea”

    This news story, broadcast on several Fox affiliates, describes author John Hood’s use of video to promote major themes, characters, and settings from Mountain Folk, including the Great Wagon Road that stretched from Pennsylvania to the backcountry of the Carolinas and Georgia.

    Episode One: “Lady in the Water”

    In this first episode of the Water Folk Video Guide, John Hood discusses magical creatures associated with water — borrowed from Welsh, Spanish, Dutch, and Native American folklore — and the roles they play in the story.

    Episode Six: “Railroad Tie-In”

    This slavery-themed episode was shot in front of the Underground Railroad Tree, an enormous 300-year-old tulip poplar that symbolizes the network of Quaker abolitionists operating near Greensboro, NC during the early 1800s.

    Join our readers guild

    Get news, reviews, and sneak peeks at John Hood’s latest fantasy books.


    Copyright © 2025 Folklore Enterprises - All Rights Reserved.

    Powered by

    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms and Conditions