His eyes were open now, watching the path of the tiny flame. If you continue your path, little spark, you will cause great harm.I must burn! I must live!There are places where your glow and heat are welcome. Find them, do not destroy the dwellings or take the lives of my people!For a second, he seemed to wink out of existence but then blazed back with renewed vigor.Thrall knew what he had to do. He lifted his hand. Forgive me, Brother Flame. But I must protect my people from the harm you would cause them. I have requested, I have begged, now I warn.The spark seemed to spasm, and yet he continued on his lethal course.Thrall, grim-faced, clenched his hand hard. The spark flared defiantly, then dwindled, finally settling down to nothing more than the faintest of glowing embers. For now, he would no longer do anyone harm.The threat had ended, but Thrall was reeling. This was not the way of the shaman with the elements. It was a relationship of mutual respect, not of threats and control and, in the end, destruction. Oh, the Spirit of Fire could never be extinguished. It was far greater than anything any shaman, or even group of shaman, could ever attempt to do to him. He was eternal, as all the spirits of the elements were. But this part of him, this elemental manifestation, had been defiant, uncooperative. And he had not been alone. He was part of a disturbing trend of elements that were sullen and rebellious rather than cooperative. And in the end, Thrall had had to completely dominate him. Other shaman were now calling rain to soak the city in case there was another aberrant spark that persisted in its course of devastation.Thrall stood in the rain, letting it soak him, pour off his massive green shoulders, and drip down his arms. What in the name of the ancestors was happening?New York Times bestselling and award-winning author Christie Golden has written thirty-five novels and several short stories in the fields of science fiction, fantasy and horror. Among her many projects are over a dozen Star Trek novels and several original fantasy novels. An avid player of World of Warcraft, she has written two manga short stories and several novels in that world (Lord of the Clans, Rise of the Horde, Arthas: Rise of the Lich King, and The Shattering: Prelude to Cataclysm) with more in the works. She has also written the StarCraft Dark Templar Trilogy, Firstborn, Shadow Hunters, and Twilight. Forthcoming is Devils’ Due, a StarCraft II novel focusing on the unlikely friendship between Jim Raynor and Tychus Findlay. Golden is also currently writing three books in the major nine-book Star Wars series Fate of the Jedi, in collaboration with Aaron Allston and Troy Denning. Her first two books in that series, Omen and Allies, are on shelves now. Golden currently lives in Colorado. She welcomes visitors to her website, www.christiegolden.com.***Thrall, wise shaman and the warchief of the Horde, has sensed a disturbing change . . . Long ago, Azeroth’s destructive native elementals raged across the world until the benevolent titans imprisoned them within the Elemental Plane. Despite the titans’ intervention, many elementals have ended up back on Azeroth. Over the ages, shaman like Thrall have communed with these spirits and, through patience and dedication, learned to soothe roaring infernos, bring rain to sun-scorched lands, and otherwise temper the elementals’ ruinous influence on the world of Azeroth.Now Thrall has discovered that the elementals no longer heed the shaman’s call. The link shared with these spirits has grown thin and frayed, as if Azeroth itself were under great duress. While Thrall seeks answers to what ails the confused elements, he also wrestles with the orcs’ precarious future as his people face dwindling supplies and growing hostility with their night elf neighbors.Meanwhile, King Varian Wrynn of Stormwind is considering violent action in response to mounting tensions between the Alliance and the Horde, a hard-line approach that threatens to alienate those closest to him, including his son, Anduin. The conflicted young prince has set out to find his own path, but in doing so, he risks becoming entangled in political instability that is setting the world on edge.The fate of Azeroth’s great races is shrouded in a fog of uncertainty, and the erratic behavior of the elemental spirits, troubling though it is, may only be the first ominous warning sign of the cataclysm to come.
New York Times bestselling and award-winning author Christie Golden has written over thirty novels and several short stories in the fields of science fiction, fantasy, and horror. Golden launched the TSR Ravenloft line in 1991 with her first novel, the highly successful Vampire of the Mists, which introduced elven vampire Jander Sunstar. To the best of her knowledge, she is the creator of the elven vampire archetype in fantasy fiction.
She is the author of several original fantasy novels, including On Fire’s Wings, In Stone’s Clasp, and Under Sea’s Shadow (currently available only as an e-book) the first three in her multi-book fantasy series “The Final Dance” from LUNA Books. In Stone’s Clasp won the Colorado Author’s League Award for Best Genre Novel of 2005, the second of Golden’s novels to win the award.
Among Golden’s other projects are over a dozen Star Trek novels and the well-received StarCraft Dark Templar trilogy, Firstborn, Shadow Hunters, and Twilight. An avid player of Blizzard’s MMORPG World of Warcraft, Golden has written several novels in that world (Arthas, Lord of the Clans, Rise of the Horde) with more in the works, including The Shattering: Prelude to Cataclysm, due out in August 2010. She has also written two Warcraft manga stories for Tokyopop, “I Got What Yule Need” and “A Warrior Made.”
Golden is currently hard at work on three books in the major nine-book Star Wars series “Fate of the Jedi,” in collaboration with Aaron Allston and Troy Denning. Her first book in the series, Omen, hit shelves in June of 2009, and her second, Allies, is slated for publication in early summer of 2010.
Golden welcomes visitors to her website, www.christiegolden.com.
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随着故事的推进,我越来越感受到一种强烈的宏大感。作者在构建世界观的时候,展现出了惊人的想象力和严谨的逻辑。无论是历史的设定,还是社会结构的描绘,都显得十分详实和有说服力。我仿佛置身于一个庞大的、充满神秘色彩的世界中,去探索那些未知的角落,去理解那些古老的传说。书中涉及的许多概念和元素,都让我对现实世界有了新的思考。我能感受到作者在构思这个故事时付出的巨大心血,他不仅仅是在讲述一个故事,更是在创造一个完整的宇宙。这种史诗级的叙事,让我欲罢不能,每一次翻开书页,都像是开启了一段全新的探险。我喜欢这种能够让我暂时忘记现实,全身心沉浸在另一个世界的感觉。
评分这本书给我最深刻的印象,莫过于其中人物塑造的深度和复杂性。我很少能遇到这样一本,书中每一个角色,即使是配角,也都有着鲜明的个性和动机。他们不是简单的符号,而是有血有肉,有优点也有缺陷的个体。我特别喜欢作者对人物内心挣扎的刻画,那些细微的情绪波动,那些难以言说的矛盾,都被描绘得淋漓尽致。有时候,我会为某个角色的选择而感到揪心,会因为他们的痛苦而感到感同身受,甚至会因为他们的某些行为而产生共鸣。书中对人性的探讨,也让我思考良多。它并没有简单地将人物划分为好人或坏人,而是展现了人在不同境遇下的选择,以及这些选择所带来的后果。我尤其欣赏作者笔下那些充满争议性的人物,他们让故事变得更加真实和引人入胜。
评分阅读这本书的过程,对我而言,更像是一次情感上的洗礼。故事中蕴含的情感力量是如此强大,它能够触及到我内心最柔软的部分。我为角色的遭遇感到悲伤,为他们的抗争而感到振奋,也为他们之间复杂的情感羁绊而动容。作者在情感的表达上,非常细腻且富有张力,他能够将那些难以言喻的情绪,用最恰当的方式呈现出来,让我感同身受。我尤其喜欢书中那些关于爱、失去、希望与绝望的描写,它们真实而深刻,让我反复回味。这本书并没有给我一个简单的结局,而是留下了很多值得思考的空间,让我得以在合上书本后,依然沉浸在故事带来的余韵之中。这种能够引发读者深度共鸣和思考的作品,才是我心中真正的佳作。
评分说实话,刚开始阅读的时候,我被作者独特的叙事方式稍稍有些挑战。故事的开端并不是那种直截了当的介绍,而是以一种碎片化的方式,像是在拼凑一个未知的全景图。起初我需要花费一些心思去梳理人物关系和事件的来龙去脉,但随着阅读的深入,我越来越被这种“抽丝剥茧”的感觉所吸引。作者并没有选择一条简单的线性叙事,而是巧妙地穿插了不同的视角和时间线,这使得整个故事更加立体和饱满。每次当我以为自己已经理清了头绪,准备好迎接接下来的情节时,作者总能给我带来新的惊喜和转折。这种非传统的叙事,反而让我更加投入,去主动地思考和解读,而不是被动地接受信息。这种阅读体验,就像是在玩一场精心设计的解谜游戏,每一次的发现都带来巨大的满足感。我个人很喜欢这种能够激发读者思考和参与的叙事手法。
评分这本书的封面设计就足够吸引我了,那破碎的纹理,暗沉却又带着微光的色彩,仿佛预示着故事中即将发生的巨变。拿到书的时候,我感觉它的分量恰到好处,翻开纸页,一股淡淡的油墨香扑鼻而来,这种触感和气味,总能让我瞬间沉浸在阅读的世界里。我最喜欢在午后,泡一杯温热的茶,找一个阳光充足的窗边,静静地开始我的阅读之旅。书中的语言风格是那种我一直以来都非常欣赏的,它不疾不徐,却又充满力量,每一个词语的运用都仿佛经过了精雕细琢,恰到好处地描绘出角色的内心世界和场景的氛围。我特别享受那种随着文字的流动,脑海中自然而然地勾勒出一幅幅生动画面的感觉。有时候,作者的某一句描述,可能只是寥寥数语,但却能让我感受到角色的喜怒哀乐,仿佛置身于那个时空之中,与他们一同经历着一切。这种沉浸感,是我对一本好书最基本的要求,而这本书,无疑已经做到了。
评分马马虎虎 喜欢魔兽的可以凑合着看
评分萨尔——从伟大的领袖走向伟大的神棍!
评分剧情非常精彩!目前这是我阅读过的WARCRAFT系列小说中最喜欢的一本。
评分愿圣光护佑这你,我记得游戏里德莱尼人都喜欢说这句话。但圣光只会忽悠你。
评分剧情非常精彩!目前这是我阅读过的WARCRAFT系列小说中最喜欢的一本。
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