Enna is a Land God: Book 1

Self-Published

Community Rating

Description

Enna went from bed ridden and dying, to dead and reincarnated in the blink of an eye. But the life she found herself in was nothing she would have ever thought of as the after life. And was she standing? On her own two feet?! And... is that a child with the face of a fox?Spirited away to a strange new world, Enna finds herself in a very unlikely situation. She was the new Land god for a forest filled with monsters and magic. But how could she be a god? surly you needed qualifications for that? A resume at least. Well, its her life now.

I am gonna try and post this on royal roads as well. I suck at copying links or what ever, so I hope this works lol                    https://www.royalroad.com/profile/614425

This was originally written on Wattpad :)KitCorbeau (@KitCorbeau) - Wattpad

Chapters(18 total)

Reviews

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Community Reviews(2)

  • GrayloreRoyal Road
    ★★★★★ 5.0
    This story has a little bit of slice-of-life with an optimistic feel to it. I'm loving it so far, though readers should be aware that there are a few spelling mistakes and other minor errata. If you're willing to overlook that this is a very pleasant and engaging read. The main character has good agency, the conflicts are realistic and resolved realistically, and the story wraps up well (though I'm glad this is only the first volume). Ironically, though the main character is a deity, she starts pretty underpowered, and early on it's as much about her diplomatic skills as it is about her power, which makes the progress she makes all the more satisfying.
  • Jonson26Royal Road
    ★★★★ 4.0
    "Enna is a Land God" is a very enjoyabl and cozy story. The central theme seems to be gaining and discovering agency, as the main character starts out not really knowing much about that. This is reasonably explained in-universe, and luckily Enna does not stay powerless, gradually learning how to use her new powers and, more importantly, how to express herself.
    My only complaint about the story is the grammar: it is riddled with mistakenly used homonyms, i.e. words that sound similar to the intended one but mean something completely different. Most of these could be easily solved via a basic grammar checker tool, so I hope the author does that at some point.