Star Trek: Typhon Pact: Plagues of Night [
paper,
Kindle] by David R. George III - I don't know what to say except that I should really read a Star Trek book already. I think the count's at 9 that I own give or take a few.
In the wake of the final
Borg invasion, which destroyed entire worlds, cost the lives of
sixty-three billion people, and struck a crippling blow to Starfleet,
six nations adversarial to the United Federation of Planets–—the Romulan
Star Empire, the Breen Confederacy, the Tholian Assembly, the Gorn
Hegemony, the Tzenkethi Coalition, and the Holy Order of the
Kinshaya–joined ranks to form the Typhon Pact.
For almost three
years, the Federation and the Klingon Empire, allied under the Khitomer
Accords, have contended with the nascent coalition on a predominantly
cold-war footing. But as Starfleet rebuilds itself, factions within the
Typhon Pact grow restive, concerned about their own inability to develop
a quantum slipstream drive to match that of the Federation. Will
leaders such as UFP President Bacco and RSE Praetor Kamemor bring about a
lasting peace across the Alpha and Beta Quadrants, or will the cold war
between the two alliances deepen, and perhaps even lead to an all-out
shooting war?
World of Warcraft: Wolfheart [
paper,
Kindle] by Richard A. Knaak - I received the hardcover last year and now the mmpb. This is another world I'd love to read. I only have limited knowledge of the game, but I have friends who absolutely love it.
"New York
Times"-bestselling author Knaak continues the thrilling story begun in
the record-breaking MMO game expansion World of Warcraft: Cataclysm...
In the wake of the
Cataclysm, conflict has engulfed every corner of Azeroth. Hungering for
more resources amid the turmoil, the Horde has pressed into Ashenvale to
feed its burgeoning war machine. There, acting warchief Garrosh
Hellscream has employed a brutal new tactic to conquer the region and
crush its night elf defenders, a move that will cripple the Alliance’s
power throughout Azeroth. Unaware of the disaster brewing in Ashenvale,
the night elves’ legendary leaders, High Priestess Tyrande Whisperwind
and Archdruid Malfurion Stormrage, conduct a summit near Darnassus in
order to vote the proud worgen of Gilneas into the Alliance. However,
resentment of Gilneas and its ruler, Genn Greymane, runs deep in
Stormwind’s King Varian Wrynn. His refusal to forgive Genn for closing
his nation off from the rest of the world years ago endangers more than
just the summit: it threatens to unravel the Alliance itself. Varian’s
animosity is only one of many unsettling developments in Darnassus. An
uneasiness creeps over the once-immortal night elves as the first of
them fall victim to the infirmities of age. While they cope with their
mortality, tensions flare over the reintroduction of the Highborne,
formerly the highest caste of night elf nobility, into their society.
Many night elves are unable to pardon the Highborne for the destruction
unleashed millennia ago by their reckless use of magic. When a murdered
Highborne is discovered on the outskirts of Darnassus, Malfurion and
Tyrande move to stop further bloodshed and unrest by appointing one of
the night elves’ most cunning and skilled agents to find the killer: the
renowned warden Maiev Shadowsong. Yet with all that is transpiring in
Darnassus, the Alliance might be powerless to stop the relentless new
warchief Garrosh from seizing the whole of Ashenvale.
Acacia (
The War with the Mein, book 1) [
paper,
Kindle] by David Anthony Durham - I made a comment on Neth Space's post about this series and was shortly thereafter contacted by the author. Neth convinced me I should give these books a try and David made sure I'll be reading it shortly. I'm highly looking forward to it.
An assassin sent
from the frozen North on a mortal mission. A mighty empire under siege
by its oldest enemy. Four royal children in exile or captivity, bent on
avenging their father’s death. Prepare yourself to be astonished and
transported by Acacia.
Leodan Akaran, ruler
of the Known World, has inherited generations of apparent peace and
prosperity, won ages ago by his ancestors. A widower of high
intelligence, he presides over an empire called Acacia, after the
idyllic island from which he rules. He dotes on his four children and
hides from them the dark realities of traffic in drugs and human lives
on which their prosperity depends. He hopes that he might change this,
but powerful forces stand in his way. And then a deadly assassin sent
from a race called the Mein, exiled long ago to an ice-locked stronghold
in the frozen north, strikes at Leodan in the heart of Acacia while the
Mein unleash surprise attacks across the empire. On his deathbed,
Leodan puts into play a plan to allow his children to escape, each to
his or her separate destiny. And so his children begin a quest to avenge
their father's death and restore the Acacian empire—this time on the
basis of universal freedom.
Acacia is a thrilling work
of the imagination that creates an all-enveloping and mythic world that
will carry readers away. It is a timeless tale of heroism and betrayal,
of treachery and revenge, of primal wrongs and ultimate redemption.
David Anthony Durham has reimagined the epic narrative for our time in a
book that will surely mark his break-through to a wide audience.
The Other Lands (
The War with the Mein, book 2) [
paper,
Kindle] by David Anthony Durham
The thrilling new installment in the ambitious Acacia trilogy, praised by the Washington Post as "gripping and sophisticated."
A
few years have passed since the conquering of the Mein, and Queen
Corinn is firmly in control of the Known World--perhaps too firmly. With
plans to expand her empire, she sends her brother, Daniel, on an
exploratory mission to the Other Lands. There Daniel discovers a lush,
exotic mainland ruled by an alliance of tribes that poses a grave danger
to the stability of the Known World. Is Queen Corinn strong enough to
face this new challenge? Readers of this bold, imaginative sequel will
not be disappointed in the answer.
The Sacred Band (
The War with the Mein, book 3) [
paper,
Kindle] by David Anthony Durham
With the first two books in the Acacia Trilogy, Acacia and The Other Lands,
David Anthony Durham has created a vast and engrossing canvas of a
world in turmoil, where the surviving children of a royal dynasty are on
a quest to realize their fates—and perhaps right ancient wrongs once
and for all. As The Sacred Band begins, one of them, Queen
Corinn, bestrides the world as a result of her mastery of spells found
in the ancient Book of Elenet. Her younger brother, Dariel, has been
sent on a perilous mission to the Other Lands, while her sister, Mena,
travels to the far north to confront an invasion of the feared race of
the Auldek. Their separate trajectories will converge in a series of
world-shaping, earth-shattering battles, all rendered with vividly
imagined detail and in heroic scale.
David Anthony Durham
concludes his tale of kingdoms in collision in an exciting fashion. His
fictional world is at once realistic and fantastic, informed with an
eloquent and distinctively Shakespearean sensibility.
Diablo III: The Order [
paper,
Kindle] by Nate Kenyon - Yet another popular game tie-in novel and I have to admit I've only had good experiences with them. This looks really cool, I just hope I have time to fit it in.
Deckard Cain made his
way across the floor, following the footprints to an alcove in the far
wall. Rotted boards clung to supports, the last remains of an ancient
library. This had been a ritual chamber, many centuries before, used to
summon things from beyond the human world. A portal to the Burning Hells
themselves, perhaps. The shelves were empty now. He saw a speck of
yellow underneath a splinter of wood and bent to pick up a corner of
parchment paper, curled and speckled with mildew. Something moved in the
shadows to his right. He whirled, holding the light up. For a moment it
appeared as if the shadows themselves were alive, bunching and swirling
like ink in water. At the same time, a voice like the distant moan of
wind drifted through the empty room and raised the hairs on the back of
his neck. “Deckaaaaarrdddd Caiiinnnn . . .” Cain felt a strange
doubling, a memory of a night many years before, when he was just a
boy. A whispered voice calling to him, just like this. He backed away,
fumbling in his rucksack with one hand, holding the lighted staff with
the other against the darkness. Already he was doubting himself: had it
just been the wind moving through the broken remains of the building
above him, a trick his mind had played after so long in the sun? The
voice came again, a sound like bones scraping together in the grave. “Your ghosts are many, old man, and they are active.” A
grating of metal over rock seemed to come from everywhere at once. Once
again a pool of black smoke thickened and then dissipated, only to
reassemble somewhere else: a shape carrying a sword, the form of a man,
but with eyes that glowed red with the fires of hell. Cain knew what
this was, yanked from the depths of his own mind and used against him:
the image of the Dark Wanderer himself, conjured up to weaken his
resolve. The smoke-shape swirled and shifted, reforming into two
indistinct human shapes, one taller and clearly female, one small and
delicate. Shock raced through Cain’s limbs as an older, familiar memory
fought to surface. He closed his eyes against the darkness as the
yawning pit of despair opened within him, threatening to pull him in. You must not listen. ***
Deckard Cain is the last of the Horadrim, the sole surviving member of a
mysterious and legendary order. Assembled by the archangel Tyrael, the
Horadrim were charged with the sacred duty of seeking out and
vanquishing the three Prime Evils: Diablo (the Lord of Terror), Mephisto
(the Lord of Hatred), and Baal (the Lord of Destruction). But that was
many years ago. As the decades passed, the Horadrim’s strength
diminished, and they fell into obscurity. Now all of their collected
history, tactics, and wisdom lie within the aged hands of one man. A man
who is growing concerned. Dark whisperings have begun to fill the air,
tales of ancient evil stirring, rumblings of a demonic invasion set to
tear the land apart. Amid the mounting dread, Deckard Cain uncovers
startling new information that could bring about the salvation—or
ruin—of the mortal world: other remnants of the Horadrim still exist. He
must unravel where they have been and why they are hiding from one of
their own. As Cain searches for the lost members of his order, he is
thrust into an alliance with an unlikely ally: Leah, an eight-year-old
girl feared by many to carry a diabolical curse. What is her secret? How
is it tied to the prophesied End of Days? And if there are other living
Horadrim, will they be able to stand against oblivion? These are the
questions Deckard Cain must answer . . . . . . before it is too late.
NICE HAUL!! :)
ReplyDeleteI have haul envy....
Haha, thanks. For some reason I actually think I can read all these books I keep getting. :)
ReplyDeleteAcacia is in my TBR pile. I really want to read it, but all this other stuff keeps jumping in there and stopping me. I've got Daniel Abraham's King's Blood sitting there taunting me into hurrying up with what I'm currently reading, so I can read it. I have high hopes for it as The Dragon's Path made my top 5 list last year.
ReplyDeleteI need to read Dragon's Path still. I've been working through his UF lately, which as been good. Epic fantasy's always been my favorite though.
DeleteAhhh...Acacia I really enjoyed the first of the trilogy and REALLY need to catch up with the remaining two books.
ReplyDeleteIt's supposed to get better after the first book too. I'm looking forward to them.
DeleteI need to get the Acacia books as well, as I have heard nothing but positive feedback on all of them. But I am really interested in the Diablo book as I have not read ANY of them. I played through the first two games back in the day. But my PC cannot even touch the new one. Bryce, have you read some of the other books? Is there a particular order to these? The synopsis of this one sounds kind of separate and probably can stand alone, but not totally sure. What other ones have you read?
ReplyDeleteAcacia has been good so far, but I've only just started. The author's got a great way with words and a great descriptive imagination.
ReplyDeleteAbout Diablo, I've sadly never read anything, but like you said, this one looks good. The storyline of the games is really cool, but this book is just a random show up. Gallery has been sending me a bunch of game tie-in's. I've only read the Gears of War one I got and it was really good.