Page 1 of 15
1
2
3
11
... LastLast
  1. #1
    Moderator Aucald's Avatar
    10+ Year Old Account
    Epic Premium
    Join Date
    Oct 2009
    Location
    Philadelphia, PA-US
    Posts
    45,961

    [Spoilers] Shadowlands Prequel Novel "Shadows Rising" Due in July

    The novel bridging between BfA and Shadowlands, titled "Shadows Rising" by Madeliene Roux, appears to be due out on July 14th, 2020. The summary blurb is as follows:

    “The Horde is nothing!” With those infamous words, Sylvanas Windrunner betrayed and abandoned the Horde she vowed to serve. The Dark Lady and her forces now work in the shadows as both the Horde and Alliance race to uncover her next move, including her own sister, Alleria. Struggling to shoulder the crushing weight of leadership, King Anduin entrusts the void elf and High Exarch Turalyon to uncover Sylvanas’s whereabouts.

    The Horde now stands at a crossroads. The various factions form a council, leaving the mantle of warchief to rest. Thrall, Lor’themar Theron, Baine Bloodhoof, First Arcanist Thalyssra, and many other familiar faces rise to this new challenge. But the threats are numerous, and the distrust runs too deep.

    When the council is derailed by a failed assassination attempt on Talanji, the Zandalari queen and a key ally, Thrall and the rest of the Horde leaders are forced into action. They empower the young troll shaman Zekhan, still grieving the loss of Varok Saurfang, with a critical mission to aid Talanji and help uncover the rising threat against her.

    Meanwhile, Nathanos Blightcaller and Sira Moonwarden have been tasked by the Dark Lady with a terrifying gambit: to kill the troll loa of death himself, Bwonsamdi.

    As Zekhan and Talanji work to save Bwonsamdi, their journey will be a key turning point in bolstering the Horde against the coming darkness and finding themselves along the way. Failure to save their allies and the trickster god will surely doom the Horde, but through success, they may rediscover what makes the Horde strong.
    There's an excerpt available from the publisher below:

    Zekhan had not avoided the unforgiving boot of war by staying still. No, he learned to make himself useful, to stay useful, and to know when that usefulness had come to its end. He had not been stationed at Varok Saurfang’s side on the battlements of Lordaeron by twiddling his thumbs or taking a nap. And so, he did not stand still while his commander fell into a quiet, intense exchange with the Earthen Ring shaman.

    Zekhan casually fell into step behind the tall and well-armed leader of the Darkspear trolls, Rokhan, using his shadow as a concealment of sorts, ignoring the screams and cheers of the crowd as the assembled council members and their assorted bodyguards, advisors, and hangers on retreated to the tempting shade of the feast tents. Zekhan wasn’t foolish enough to think those celebratory cheers were for him. No, he was in a shadow and was a shadow: first his father’s, then Saurfang’s, and now Thrall’s.

    And as a shadow, he crept along, looking for something interesting enough to occupy his time. “Keep ya hands busy and ya mind sharp,” his father Hekazi had told him when Zekhan was still knee-high to a raptor. “And ya will never want for work nor amusement.”

    Work and amusement would have to go hand-in-hand that day. A drum circle with a trio of wild dancers had been set up outside the tents to welcome the esteemed guests. He watched the goblin, Gazlowe, sidle up toward the drums, doing a silly two-step and making the dancers laugh. The music, the steady, infectious rhythm of it gradually spread to the others approaching the tent, tense shoulders moving to the beat, narrowed eyes widening with appreciation at the talented (and scantily dressed) dancers.

    Only Talanji and her Zandalari contingent stood apart. The detached detachment. He wasn’t exactly surprised. While the Horde Council had welcomed her and her folk warmly, her response so far had been nothing but chilly. Zekhan had kept a close eye on her, intrigued and, admittedly, a little besotted with the beautiful queen. She had the most delicate tusks and arresting blue eyes…

    She also, quite clearly, had a temper.

    Talanji paced back and forth on the far southern end of the feast tables, a turquoise-skinned, yellow-haired young troll girl fanning the queen with a massive palm frond. Annoyed with the little puffs of wind, Talanji batted at the girl, shooing her away. Zekhan frowned. Had there not been more bodyguards with Talanji when they arrived? Or had one of her handmaidens gone missing? Orgrimmar was not the most confusing city to navigate in the world, but perhaps one of the Zandalari had gotten lost on their way to the meeting that afternoon.

    Maybe, he thought. Maybe. He sidled closer, sensing an opportunity. The Horde needed every advantage it could get, and that meant securing Talanji’s faith anew. Their grieving ally did not seem keen on joining them in war or peace, or willing to provide troops. Or ready to embrace the council. No, she didn’t seem very impressed at all.

    “Might I be of service, ya Majesty?”

    Zekhan gave a low bow and brought out his most dazzling smile. The girl fanning the queen made a tiny sound of alarm. The queen herself stared at him—through him—then rolled her eyes.

    “And how could you possibly be of service?” Her keen eyes no doubt took in his humble garments and dirt under his fingernails. Meanwhile, she and her servants glittered like firebugs at dusk.

    “Ya entourage be lookin’ a little light. If ya need an errand run or a fresh cup of wine—”

    Talanji tilted her head to the side, her earrings jangling softly as she interrupted him. “You are spying on me now?”

    Not the response he was hoping for. Zekhan backed away, already bracing for the lecture Thrall would give him for bothering the queen. He threw up his arms as if in surrender, a cold shiver overcoming him, like someone had traced the tip of a knife down his spine. And then he fell backward, steady one minute and flailing the next, his elbow smashing into something hard and then wet. A goblet. Talanji’s missing servant had returned and Zekhan had crashed right into him.

    The cup clattered to the ground, splashing wine all over Zekhan’s feet and the hem of Talanji’s gown.

    “Mind yourself!” the servant carrying the tray and goblet shouted, scrambling to scoop up the fallen goblet. He was older than Talanji, the servant, with scars criss-crossing his nose and a visible sheen of sweat over his brow. “Clumsy oaf! That was the queen’s wine!”

    “Just a mistake,” Talanji said, calmly lifting her skirt to inspect the damage. “He meant no harm…”

    But Zekhan stopped listening to the queen, staring at the stain on the fine white silk of her dress. First Arcanist Thalyssra’s silken voice was suddenly in his head…

    I cannot wait for you to sample our arcfruit sangree, Lor’themar. We have generously arranged enough for all of Orgrimmar to enjoy.

    The ugly splotch on the queen’s hem was purplish blue and turning black. What’s more, the puddle left behind on the dirt smelled distinctly of death.

    “Another cup for you, Majesty. I will return,” the servant was saying, bowing to Talanji as he shuffled away.

    “No,” Zekhan knelt and swept his fingers through the spill on the ground, then sniffed. Whatever it was, it wasn’t wine. An herbal tea, maybe, or something worse. “What you be servin’ her?”

    “W-Wine,” the servant stammered, but the sweat on the troll’s brow poured heavy down his temples. “Just wine.”

    Standing, Zekhan had just enough time to wedge himself between Talanji and the scarred servant, who yanked a dagger from under his tunic and lunged toward the queen. The commotion had aroused the interest of the entire council, and now Zekhan felt the feasting tents explode into chaos around him. The drums went abruptly silent followed by hushed whispers from the crowd outside.

    “Back!” Zekhan thundered at Talanji. “Behind me!”

    A throwing axe flew straight over Zekhan’s shoulder, close enough to give him a haircut. He shrugged it off, hurling a fork of lightning right after the axe—the bolt slammed the servant into a tent pole before he slumped to the ground, the throwing axe buried in the ground beside him, a narrow miss. Thrall’s heavy tread came next, and then his intimidating shadow as he raced by them and toward the assassin. That explained the axe.

    “Hold him!” Someone was shouting. And, “Protect the queen!”

    Zekhan shook the cotton out of his ears and stumbled after Thrall, who reached the assailant a moment too late. The dagger was still in the troll’s hand and swiftly put to use, jammed into his own stomach and yanked upward.

    “Speak,” Thrall had the troll by his neck, but the dagger had done its gruesome work. “Who sent you? Who sent you?”

    The old scarred troll had just enough left in him to whisper a final threat, then his head went loose on his neck, a trickle of blood seeping from between withered lips. “She… will know our… b-bite.”

    No sooner had the troll spoken his last than Talanji was upon them, pushing Thrall and Zekhan aside and kneeling in the blood-soaked earth beside the assassin. “He is Zandalari. One of my own… But how?”

    “All of your people must be held and questioned,” Thrall replied sternly. “There is never just one assassin.”

    “Question your own people!” Talanji fumed, leaping to her feet, her hands and gown covered in blood. Covered in poison. “We will return home before more blood can be spilled.”

    Thrall sighed and shifted, standing in her way. “I assure you—”

    “You can assure me nothing—not ships, not soldiers, not my own personal safety.” She straightened her head and at her height, she could easily look Thrall in the eye. Zekhan cowered, a different kind of energy crackling around them. “You do not need me here. Zandalar will always need me, so that is where I will be.”

    All eyes followed the Zandalari queen as she gathered her small entourage and marched out of the tents, head held high and proud. All eyes, Zekhan noted, except for those belonging to Thrall. It had all happened in the space of a blink: the assassin, the lightning, the queen’s outrage… He couldn’t help but fixate on the moment when his arm knocked the cup out of the assassin’s hand. He felt certain his feet had been firmly planted on the ground, that something or someone had shoved him back into the Zandalari.

    The council members came one by one, drawn by the commotion. Darkspear Chieftain Rokhan appearing at his side, only then sheathing his daggers. Smirking, the taller troll clapped Zekhan on the back, and Zekhan was just dizzy enough from the chaos to sway a little from the force of it.

    “Ya did good, boy. Those be the reflexes of Sin’Dall.”

    But I didn’t do it.

    The lightning he could take credit for, but the cup? The cup… He frowned, gazing around at the faces of relieved council members. Only Thrall shared his concern, visible at the back of the crowd, his brow furrowed, his eyes dark and distant. Now all the mightiest the Horde had to offer gathered around him, echoing Rokhan’s sentiments. Already he heard someone say the word “hero” and Zekhan shook his head. No, no, he wasn’t a hero at all: just a boy from the jungles, from a village that would fit inside the gates of Orgrimmar a hundred times over. He only wanted to make himself useful, not win some kind of accolade.

    Zekhan found Thrall’s face among the throng again, but his expression went unchanged. The single black smudge in the sky on a cloudless day, the distant warning presaging rain. Only a few would notice it, only a few would take heed, but when the great leader worried, the wise warrior beneath him worried, too.

    The Darkspear chieftain placed a hand on his shoulder, but Zekhan didn’t smile—he trembled instead.
    Last edited by Aucald; 2020-02-07 at 09:29 PM.
    "We're more of the love, blood, and rhetoric school. Well, we can do you blood and love without the rhetoric, and we can do you blood and rhetoric without the love, and we can do you all three concurrent or consecutive. But we can't give you love and rhetoric without the blood. Blood is compulsory. They're all blood, you see." ― Tom Stoppard, Rosencrantz and Guildenstern are Dead

  2. #2
    well, no Golden this time guys so you should be happy xd

  3. #3
    New writer. Golden is nowhere to be seen and the excerpt recalls that Talanji has little reason to like the Horde. Memeboi is in it, but he gets to be more than a meme.

    There's also a promise to what the end of BFA entailed. Given that this:

    As Zekhan and Talanji work to save Bwonsamdi, their journey will be a key turning point in bolstering the Horde against the coming darkness and finding themselves along the way. Failure to save their allies and the trickster god will surely doom the Horde, but through success, they may rediscover what makes the Horde strong.
    is in the summary it does look we'll be finding the true meaning of muh honor for the 40th time, but that's unavoidable.

    Could be good, could be bad, but I'll probs give it a read.
    Dickmann's Law: As a discussion on the Lore forums becomes longer, the probability of the topic derailing to become about Sylvanas approaches 1.

    Tinkers will be the next Class confirmed.

  4. #4
    Quote Originally Posted by Monkeymootwo View Post
    Come on now. You should know nobody on this forum will ever be happy :P
    can't argue that

  5. #5
    Old God Soon-TM's Avatar
    5+ Year Old Account
    Join Date
    Aug 2017
    Location
    Netherstorm
    Posts
    10,845
    Quote Originally Posted by DemonHunter18 View Post
    well, no Golden this time guys so you should be happy xd
    It's certainly a good point. Btw, that was an interesting read @Aucald.
    Quote Originally Posted by trimble View Post
    WoD was the expansion that was targeted at non raiders.

  6. #6
    The Unstoppable Force Arrashi's Avatar
    10+ Year Old Account
    Join Date
    Apr 2011
    Location
    Land of human potential (and non-toxic masculinity)
    Posts
    23,003
    Saying it now: Zekhan will die after covering talanji/bwonsamdi with his body when nathanos will try to kill him with a handgun.

  7. #7
    Void Lord Aeluron Lightsong's Avatar
    10+ Year Old Account
    Join Date
    Jul 2011
    Location
    In some Sanctuaryesque place or a Haven
    Posts
    44,683
    Quote Originally Posted by Monkeymootwo View Post
    I REALLY wish they would stop putting important story beats into these damn books. The whole Calia/summit thing in BfA is just like wtf unless you read the book :/
    The people that died there have their graves at Arathi Highlands so the books events aren't entirely forgotten.


    OT: Talanji seems...grumpy...but the biggest takeaway is why kill the loa of Death. What would there be to gain aside from maybe the Jailer wants all souls to himself(Trolls or otherwise).
    #TeamLegion #UnderEarthofAzerothexpansion plz #Arathor4Alliance #TeamNoBlueHorde

    Warrior-Magi

  8. #8
    Quote Originally Posted by Arrashi View Post
    Saying it now: Zekhan will die after covering talanji/bwonsamdi with his body when nathanos will try to kill him with a handgun.
    We can only hope. Sylv can continue her work of muh honor-related pest control. Truly a hero we can believe in.

    @Aeluron Lightsong

    Bwon has his own separate domain of death. He nabs souls away from the Jailor and so away from her power source. Kill him and all those souls go to the Jailor.
    Dickmann's Law: As a discussion on the Lore forums becomes longer, the probability of the topic derailing to become about Sylvanas approaches 1.

    Tinkers will be the next Class confirmed.

  9. #9
    Warchief Lupinemancer's Avatar
    10+ Year Old Account
    Join Date
    Apr 2011
    Location
    Somewhere between here and the sick, twisted world inside my head
    Posts
    2,210
    One word: YES!!!!

  10. #10
    The Unstoppable Force
    15+ Year Old Account
    Join Date
    Jun 2008
    Location
    Where Thrall and the Horde needs me to be
    Posts
    23,565
    Hm, interesting. Sounds much more exciting than "Before the Storm", though that's not saying much. I like the idea that Talanji, supposedly, regrets joining the Horde. That explains why she was nowhere to be seen in 8.2, 8.2.5 or 8.3.

    Amazing sig, done by mighty Lokann

  11. #11
    is this gonna be from Titan's perspective

  12. #12
    Warchief Lupinemancer's Avatar
    10+ Year Old Account
    Join Date
    Apr 2011
    Location
    Somewhere between here and the sick, twisted world inside my head
    Posts
    2,210
    Quote Originally Posted by Monkeymootwo View Post
    I REALLY wish they would stop putting important story beats into these damn books. The whole Calia/summit thing in BfA is just like wtf unless you read the book :/
    Are you crazy? More books is always a good thing we need more of them.

  13. #13
    Quote Originally Posted by Lupinemancer View Post
    Are you crazy? More books is always a good thing we need more of them.
    The audio books and novellas are usually the best bits, since they're free. Blocking huge plotpoints behind paywalls that usually get released with some delay is bad, even if the story ends up being good (like Shadows of the Horde was and BTS and Tides of War most definitely weren't).
    Dickmann's Law: As a discussion on the Lore forums becomes longer, the probability of the topic derailing to become about Sylvanas approaches 1.

    Tinkers will be the next Class confirmed.

  14. #14
    Herald of the Titans enigma77's Avatar
    5+ Year Old Account
    Join Date
    Apr 2019
    Location
    EU
    Posts
    2,677
    Summary of the preview: The Horde, The Horde, The Horde, The Horde and the The Horde.

  15. #15
    Increase booksales just means less story/character development in game. The game itself suffers from the take away.

  16. #16
    Nice, more Alleria and Void Elf lore!

    Also, well, it was predictable that Alleria would play a role in Shadowlands. She vowed to kill Sylvanas after her failed reunion in Three Sisters.
    The Void. A force of infinite hunger. Its whispers have broken the will of dragons... and lured even the titans' own children into madness. Sages and scholars fear the Void. But we understand a truth they do not. That the Void is a power to be harnessed... to be bent by a will strong enough to command it. The Void has shaped us... changed us. But you will become its master. Wield the shadows as a weapon to save our world... and defend the Alliance!

  17. #17
    Quote Originally Posted by Lupinemancer View Post
    Are you crazy? More books is always a good thing we need more of them.
    yeah, we need some big retcons

  18. #18
    Meh, only book I ever read was Arthas: Rise of the Lich King and only other book I would have read would have been "Arthas: Return of the King, a tale of redemption where his tortured soul valiantly fights back Sylvanas and The Jailer to rise up as a triumphant edge lord hero and rightful King of The Undead of Lordaeron, coming to a Target shelf or Wal-Mart bin near you."

    Pass. Sylvanas has been so far up my nose, I'm starting to feel her boots on my chin.

  19. #19
    Bloodsail Admiral Plehnard's Avatar
    10+ Year Old Account
    Join Date
    Apr 2012
    Location
    Germany
    Posts
    1,101
    So Sira is still a mindless Minion of Sylvanus.

  20. #20
    Quote Originally Posted by Monkeymootwo View Post
    I REALLY wish they would stop putting important story beats into these damn books. The whole Calia/summit thing in BfA is just like wtf unless you read the book :/
    They could at least tie them in better, if calia had more of presance in bfa it would at least make more sense to those who didn't read the books

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •