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Title: Temple of the Serpent
Series: Warhammer: Thanquol & Boneripper #2
Author: C.L. Werner
Rating: 3 of 5 Stars
Genre: Fantasy
Pages: 416
Format: Digital Edition
Title: Temple of the Serpent
Series: Warhammer: Thanquol & Boneripper #2
Author: C.L. Werner
Rating: 3 of 5 Stars
Genre: Fantasy
Pages: 416
Format: Digital Edition
Synopsis:
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Thanquol is blamed
for the loss of the warpstone in the previous book and various skaven
faction leaders all plan on killing him. To survive, he goes on a
mission with the assassin faction to wipe out the leader of a city
sacred to that faction. The assassins were driven out long ago and a
race of lizardmen took it over. Now it is up to Thanquol and a small
army to penetrate a dangerous jungle, find the city, kill the leading
magician and make it back home. Hopefully with loads and loads of
loot.
There is a magic
toad, who has the power of mathematics from the higher powers, that
is orchestrating many strings. In response to the skavens coming to
the city, he brings a boatload of humans to balance out the equation
and to see what the final solution will be. The final solution? Every
single human dies by the end of the book. Almost every single skaven
is killed and the lizardman magician dies as well. The toad goes back
to contemplating mathematics.
Thanquol gets back
to the ship and after a fight with zombie pirates, abandons the ship
in a lifeboat and the magic toad magically has it go back to the
skaven capital. That is how the book ends.
My
Thoughts:
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I rather enjoyed this dark fantasy. Having a villain as the main
character allows me to root against him and when things fall apart
around him, it isn't a bad thing but a good thing. It also helps that
skavens as a race are just despicably cowardly creatures and the
author does a fantastic job of getting into Thanquol's head and
showing how he can switch his thought process on a dime. Each skaven
is completely self-centered, so what is good is what is good for them
at that moment.
I knew that the human storyline was going to be a bloody mess, but I
figured the mercenary guy, Graetz Adalwolf, might survive. I did not
see him killing himself to escape the attention of the magical toad.
Good call though, as that would probably end up having been hell on
earth for Graetz. There was only one female human character, so she
was the obvious love interest, but it was written in such a desultory
manner that it was no surprise when she bites it at the end. In
fact, with just a very small re-working, the whole human storyline
could have been done away with. But since they provided at least half
the blood and entrails, this story would only have been half as fun
without them.
Boneripper. Once again, not really a character but a name. Thanquol
seems to have quite the limited imagination when it comes to naming
his rat ogres, so when they unsurprisingly die in one violent way or
another, he just names the new one Boneripper. Bonerippers remind me
more of a force of nature than a character. Kind of like a super
violent magical spell that Thanquol has, but in the shape of an ogre.
Now, like I stated at the beginning, I did enjoy this. I only rolled
my eyes once, right near the end. Some human zombies that the skaven
army had encountered takes over the ship that Thanquol needs. Can
anyone say “Pirates of the Caribbean”? Sigh. But it did allow the
current Boneripper to die and become a food source for Thanquol on
his magical boat ride back to his home. Ok, that whole “magical
boat ride back home” thing had me rolling my eyes too.
But I still want to read the final book in the trilogy. Considering
how I've felt about previous Warhammer books, that counts as a
stunning success for me.
★★★☆☆
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