Incorporal beings have existed since before recorded time.
These beings are engaged in a competition, bragging rights basically.
They follow a set of rules agreed on by all of them, they can not directly act in the world, they can only give information.
They use people and army as pawns in their game.
There is a being above them that acts as a referee.
Long ago, (in the last game they played) They had taught their civilizations how to use magic and access pools of power. But in the course of the game one being broke the rules and began acting directly in the world, attacking the civilizations of the other beings directly. They take their case to the referee being and the being seals these powers into stones that can not, WILL not give power to any of the beings. The rogue being is exiled from the being's plane of existance and is forced into a physical body. The rest of the beings go into low activity, all their civilizations had dispersed because of the attacks, and they decided to take a break.
Now, thousands of years later, a new game has begun.
The beings are mobilizing again. They have caught wind that the exiled being is creating an army using some of the power it retained from its "beinghood"
The story starts with a group of three being hired to steal one of these stones from Gasa Vitoli, but different people are lead by different beings and spheres of influence. And as the story unfolds the characters attempt to discover how the stones work as beings influence people and goverments around them, each trying to gain access to the stones.
[This message has been edited by TheOnceandFutureMe (edited April 02, 2008).]
This is more of the underlying premise then a synopsis of the book.
(Here's hoping it's not a group of unlikely heroes on a quest to find the artifact/magic item/historic weapon that will save the world)
Jayson Merryfield
Yeah, I didn't mean to suggest that you knew nothing of characters. But for me to get excited about a story, I need to know about more than just the world. The world you described is interesting, but I'm not going to read a novel based solely on its world. For me to read a premise and know if I'm interested, I need to know about individual characters - who am I going to be following around for 9 books?
Best of luck with it.