I, Strahd: The War Against Azalin

! Read ! I, Strahd: The War Against Azalin by P.N. Elrod ↠ eBook or Kindle ePUB. I, Strahd: The War Against Azalin There were no ornate illuminations, no fussy borders, only lines of plain text in hard black ink. By all the good gods, a personal journal?. The flowing handwriting was a bit difficult to follow at first; the writers style of calligraphy had not been in common use for three hundred years. Some of the parchment pages were the color of cream, thick and substantial, made to last many, many lifetimes. Other pages were thin and desiccated, positively yellow from age, and crackled alarmingly as Van R

I, Strahd: The War Against Azalin

Author :
Rating : 4.17 (759 Votes)
Asin : 0786907541
Format Type : paperback
Number of Pages : 320 Pages
Publish Date : 2017-03-25
Language : English

DESCRIPTION:

"Lesser of two evils?" according to Christopher J. Cavallo. P.N.Elrod returns with "I, Strahd: The War Against Azalin." To begin, the book is supurbly written. Ms. Elrod has a wonderful grasp of language, and a great sence to her craft as a writer. She also has a wonderful grasp of the characters, both Strahd, and Azalin. Despite being undead, she fills them with the tribul. A Customer said A chess match on steriods!. This excellent novel continues the story of Strahd the magically talented vampire extraordinaire by recounting the time Azalin made his entrance into the Mists of Barovia. Azalin, an opponent whose power dwarfs Strahd's, realizes that he needs Strahd ( for a while anyway) in order to escape this plane. Strahd in tu. A Sequel Well-Worth the Wait! Matt Lynch (Mattlynch@aol.com) The sequel to P. N. Elrod's I, Strahd: The Memoirs of a Vampire is a worthy continuation in the story. The only errors I found were a typographical one on page 265 and a possible error in the name of one of the Tatyanas Strahd is always persuing; the last book said her name to be Olya, but this calls her Allina. No

There were no ornate illuminations, no fussy borders, only lines of plain text in hard black ink. By all the good gods, a personal journal?. The flowing handwriting was a bit difficult to follow at first; the writer's style of calligraphy had not been in common use for three hundred years. Some of the parchment pages were the color of cream, thick and substantial, made to last many, many lifetimes. Other pages were thin and desiccated, positively yellow from age, and crackled alarmingly as Van Richten turned them over. No table of contents, but from the dates it looked to be some kind of history.He turned to the first page and read:I, Strahd, Lord of Barovia, well aware certain events of my reign have been desperately misunderstood by those who are better at garbling history than recording it, hereby set down an exact record of those events, that the truth may at last be known .He caught his breath

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