In an age of wonder, when the Iverians still sang the songs of the True Gods, a shadow rose from the east. The Wyld came - fire in their hands, hunger in their hearts - and peace in the realm of King Ir was broken. To protect his people and his beloved daughter Beccana, King Ir decrees the building of a great wall. But when his strongest men break their backs places the wall's first stone, only a cunning mage offers a way forward: they should ask for the help of Geudan, a gentle giant, whose price is modest - six slices of bread a day. But bread and bargains soon turn bitter, and what begins as a wall for protection, becomes a monument to pride, betrayal, and the folly of kings. In this tale from the Amra, D.J.M. Lazeroms weaves ancient legend of loyalty and deceit, of light and shadow, of gods and men. The King and the Giant's Wall is a myth reborn - rich in rhythm, tragic in tone, and wondrous in its telling.