#the ground was super slippery and some random person saw me but it was totally worth it
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So my discovery of and subsequent interest in the new album Bicycle by @patricia-taxxon has overlapped with my astronomy class where the teacher likes to use a lot of those smeary, long-exposure star photos in her slideshows and... Yeah
Original under the cut
I really liked how the fur texture turned out but it got a little hard to see in the final version :')
#art#digital art#patricia taxxon#furry#i listened to the album while on a walk today#i cant remember which one but one of them gave me the sudden and intense urge to run for a little bit#the ground was super slippery and some random person saw me but it was totally worth it
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Shadows Rising: A Reaction Post
Short, mostly non-spoilery version: I liked it overall. I give it a solid B, maybe a B+.
I was disappointed in how little Nathanos and/or Sylvanas content there was, but I think proclamations of the shipâs doom are premature. Â
Iâm intrigued by the first rumblings of new character development for certain characters, especially Anduin, Alleria and Turalyon.
I was rooting for Talanji so much. Sheâs great. Zekhan is a cinnamon roll too pure for this world. Sira was kind of boring. Fairshaw is so darn heartwarming I canât stand it. I like Bwonsamdi more now. The lack of Wrathion is unsurprising but unfortunate. Nothing new with Tyrande but sheâs already poised for major development in Shadowlands.
Much longer, spoilery version below.
This ended up being more of a ramble than an essay, but thereâs a lot of disjointed thoughts pinging around in my head, so letâs dive in.
Overall, I enjoyed Shadows Rising. Was it the best book ever?  No.  Not even the best Warcraft book ever.  But it was an enjoyable read. Itâs always a treat to get into the heads of characters we mostly know in passing from in-game events. There are internal, emotional beats that cannot easily be explored in the game, and the books are a way to build the world and the characters in a more introspective, slow-paced manner. I like that. (Thatâs not to say there are no action scenes, because there definitely are.)
Talanji, Jaina, Zekhan, and Anduin were all written well and sympathetically. Maievâs only in a couple scenes, but she felt off to me. Nathanos was very in-character, in all his snide, sour glory.  Flynn and Mathias are great together.
The pacing was fine. The descriptions were good, and it all felt grounded in the game world (i.e. landmarks, ambiance, the ridiculous amount of stairs in Dazâalor...) Each of the Horde leaders got a moment or two in the spotlight. Despite a fair amount of chapters about Anduin, Alleria, Turalyon, and Jaina, it still felt like a Horde-centric book to me. Not that thatâs a bad thing.
Prologue: Gayness detected on page 8! And itâs even something I kind of inadvertently predicted. In my reaction post for Before the Storm I wrote, â In this book alone, it would have been so easy to have that blacksmith bringing a helmet as a gift to his long-lost Forsaken husband instead of friend.â Thatâs basically what we have here. I donât know if they were married, and neither were blacksmiths, but the Westfall moonshiner describes one of the Forsaken slain in Arathi as âthe best man I ever knew and loved.â Tada! See how easy it was? Add Jago x Wilmer to the growing list of LGBT rep in Azeroth. (Even if theyâre super minor characters in the long run, itâs still great to see.)
There might be some kind of parallel to be drawn between Alleria failing Anduin (by not finding/killing Sylvanas) and Nathanos failing Sylvanas (by not killing Bwonsamdi) but my brain is too overloaded from binge-reading to articulate it right now. Both failed their king or queen, but both were also given nearly impossible tasks.Â
Alleria and Turalyon are definitely being set up as antagonists. We are clearly supposed to side with Jaina on this, and be uncomfortable (if not outright horrified) at their torture methods. Itâs especially disturbing how they use their respective void and light powers to accomplish their goals. I mean, on one hand itâs great that both sides of the great cosmic divide can work together, and their marriage seems stronger than it was for awhile there, but yeesh...can you not torture people? I know, ends justify the means, slippery slope, greater evil, blah blah, but still...thatâs not okay. Itâs yet another sign that the Light is not necessarily good (or the void necessarily evil).
I welcome conflict within the Alliance, though. Thatâs been the Hordeâs thing for long enough. Time to see how the blue side deals with its rifts.
In chapter 2 Nathanos is annoyed when a dreadtick flies by his head. What, was it too similar to a bird for his liking? Heh.Â
All that time in Nazmir, and we didnât get to see a single crawg! Â Harumph.
It took three chapters and 39 pages to finally get something from Nathanos' perspective, and he was much more scarce going forward than I had hoped. The bits we did get from his perspective were great and in-character, but I wanted to get into his head more. Most of his scenes were from the POV of Sira or the troll villain instead, and while Apari was a good character I find Sira to be pretty one-dimensional.Â
I kind of got paternal vibes from Nathanos toward Sira, though. He was like, âIâve been undead a lot longer than you; I know how to handle the bloodlust and such. Get it out of your system at appropriate times but learn to control yourself. Thereâs more to (un)life than slaughtering people.â She herself, though, was just âRawr, I hate everything and want to kill anything that moves.â I mean, I get that sheâs been through some traumatic stuff, but I didnât find myself invested in her at all.
Page 42, as a bunch of trolls are about to be slaughtered:  "Hungry birds circled, expectant of a big meal, and Nathanos so hated to disappoint."  WHAT? Nathanos wanted to do something nice for BIRDS? I know, the phrasing fits with his dry, sarcastic sense of humor, but considering the running joke about him hating birds, it still made me go, âHuh?â
Chapter 5 (and later on, as it turns out): Â Zekhan having a soft spot for kids is too precious for this world.
Page 51: Thalyssra's eyes were "sparkling as she gazed across the room at Lor'themar."  Awwwwwww.  There was a surprising amount of ship fodder in this book overall, with Lorâthemar x Thalyssra, Turalyon x Alleria, Fairshaw, and Zehkhan x Talanji all getting a moment or two (or more.)Â
Chapter 6:Â Anduin says, "Turalyon, take Alleria Windrunner and investigate these deaths." Â You know, Alleria...YOUR WIFE? Â I don't think you need to say her last name there, genius.Â
While Iâm being snarky about the editing, there were at least two times where the word âgrievesâ was used instead of âgreaves.â I spotted a couple other little things that a better editor (or one with more time, maybe it was rushed, I donât know) would have caught.
Chapter 7: More matter-of-fact LGBT inclusion for minor characters, this time a lesbian troll couple who want to marry. Yes, thank you Blizzard, keep it up.
Chapter 8: If youâre going to make the âZappy Boyâ nickname for Zekhan canon, having Bwonsamdi be the one to wink at the camera and use it was a great decision. I can totally imagine him saying it.
We learn the name of Varokâs wife/Dranoshâs mother: Remda. Although I read elsewhere that the vision Zekhan saw of the Saurfang family in the afterlife was just Bwonsamdiâs B.S., it was still cool.
Chapter 13:  Nathanos wearing cologne? Love it. And itâs not even to cover up the rotting smell, because apparently his new body doesnât stink like some undead; it just doesnât smell like a living person, either, and some find it unnerving. So he wears cologne. Thatâs such a delightful little detail, and surprisingly considerate of him.
Sira complaining about bugs: Â "We'll be eaten alive." Â Uh no, you'd have to BE ALIVE for that to happen. Tsk.
Nathanos being called "the pale rider" makes me think of old cowboy movies. Like, âYou greenhorns better clear out; the Pale Rider is cominâ to town and thereâs gonna be trouble. Go wake up the sheriff.â Â
Sira says that while on the voyage to Zandalar the dark rangers liked to tell the tale of how Nathanos was promoted to Ranger Lord by Sylvanas.  I'm surprised he lets them gossip like that! His quests in vanilla made it seem he wanted to keep those parts of his past on the down-low, at least from the player.
Chapter 14: Thrall's second kid is Rehze. *blink* Reh-zee? Rez? Ruh-zay? I guess sheâs not named after anyone. After he named his son Durak (sort of after Durotan) I assumed heâd continue the pattern with kid #2. Maybe sheâs named after one of Aggraâs relatives. (Later I read on Wowpedia that the author actually said she dislikes the âfan serviceâ trend of naming children after other characters so she just picked a random orcish name. I donât think itâs fan service, because lots of real-life people do it, but okay. Fair enough.)
Speaking of orcish names, thereâs an orc page helping out the council named Gunk. Like, what you clean out from under your fingernails after gardening. Gunk. LOL
Aww, thatâs no fun...Maiev's wearing a cape trimmed in white fur, not daggers. What happened to her impeccable/deadly fashion sense?
Chapter 16:Â Zekhan starting to clap at Talanji's speech and then stopping and shrinking back when he realized no one else was applauding was so freaking adorable.
Chapter 17: Fairshaw, full steam ahead!!! Their chemistry is everything I hoped it would be. Learning a little about Flynnâs tragic past was both fascinating and heartbreaking. (We learned his momâs name: Lyra Fairwind. R.I.P.)
Chapter 18: Proodmoore keep has a gallery with floor to ceiling oil paintings of the Proudmoore family, extended family, and beloved friends. It now includes Anduin. I canât help thinking that, in a different timeline, Arthasâ portrait would have been there.
Will wonders never case? Ji Firepaw actually gets to do stuff!!! GASP!
"Thrall understood that to other humans Wrynn was said to be pleasing-looking, but to the orc, Anduin simply looked like a small, pink boy swallowed by clunky armor." So itâs canon that Anduin is good-looking in-universe. But LMAO at Thrallâs description.
Chapter 22: From Shawâs POV, "These odds ranked pretty low...  Maybe just above the time he had relied completely on a shoddy network of spies embedded in a cheese business." OMG leave Elling Trias alone! He did his best! LOL
Shaw wanting to hang out in a mountain meadow and whittle bird calls (perhaps even with a special someone) was so touchingly normal. Thatâs the kind of characterization that the books are so much better at than the game.
I actually like Bwonsamdi more after reading this. Not that I disliked him before, but I didnât have a strong sense of him due to not playing Horde as much in BFA. Heâs a well-done gray character: not good, not evil, insightful but a smartass, part of the great cycle, out for himself but also taking his duties seriously (saving troll souls from the Maw.)Â
Iâm not entirely sure that we needed as much from Thrallâs POV as we got. I mean, sure, heâs a familiar character with ties to a lot of others, so it was easy to drop him into situations, and his ties to Jaina made cross-faction communication easier, but he didnât seem as relevant to the lore of Zandalar and the Shadowlands as some other characters.
Maiev seemed OOC, especially in the Stockades scene. I know one of the themes of the book was âpeople change,â and I suppose I should be happy that she has a more moderate viewpoint nowadays, dialing back the Lust For Vengeance Meter from eleven to maybe a five or a six, but it didnât feel like Maiev. Especially because her message of âmaybe donât go overboard with this vengeance thingâ was aimed at Tyrande, of all people, someone who Maiev has had quite legitimate reasons to dislike for a very, very long time. I could see her maybe mellowing out a little in front of fellow Wardens, but Tyrande? Eh, it didnât feel right to me.
No surprises from Tyrande in this. Sheâs still steely cold, vengeance-obsessed, consumed by anger. Not that I blame her, but itâs not healthy. I know weâll be exploring her situation more in Shadowlands, so this was more of a reminder/reinforcement of where she is right now. It was kind of funny how Thrall, Baine and Calia tried to talk to her and she just gave them the stink eye and the silent treatment, though.
Iâm fine with Anduin exploring his dark side a bit more, as long as they donât go overboard with it. I like him as an earnest, good-hearted character. Itâs only natural to test your limits, though, especially in times of crisis. Power corrupts, and heâs got plenty of it, both politically and magically, so I can understand Jaina and Mathias being a bit uneasy. Add to that the increasing themes about the Light not being as benevolent as we originally assumed, and thereâs potential for interesting plot there. In the end I want Anduin to stay firmly on the side of good, empathy, compassion, etc., but a deviation into the shadows along the way isnât a bad thing for the story.
I imagine every single person who read about Anduin sneaking off to the Lionâs Pride Inn in Goldshire smirked about that placeâs reputation on certain RP realms. I was surprised he didnât find scantily-clad elves and draenei dancing on the furniture. And then it turns out Jaina was there, too. Awkward!
Why, oh why couldnât we have had a scene with Anduin and Wrathion hanging out (incognito, of course) in a tavern? That was their thing in MoP, and now with Anduin desperately wanting to get away from his duties for awhile and soak up some tavern ambiance it would have been perfect. Let Anduin show off the best taverns Stormwind has to offer. Even though Wrathion was as much a guest at the Tavern in the Mists as Anduin was, he acted like he owned the place and Anduin was his guest, so let them turn the tables and have Anduin play host. There could be jokes about how he better not punch Wrathion again or theyâll get kicked out for starting a bar fight. They could have still seen the young recruits, ran into Jaina, etc. But Anduin really needs a buddy to hang out with right now. Â
And you canât tell me after Nyaâlotha fell Wrathion just disappeared again and never at least visited Stormwind to tell grandiose tales about how he stabbed an Old God, it was so heroic, and he wasnât scared at all, and those mean adventurers were so quick to believe heâd been corrupted, but he hadnât, and did you know Azshara was there? And then NâZoth almost won but KERPOW LAZERS and oh Anduin you should have seen it, etc. etc. etc.
I should be used to being disappointed about Wrathionâs absence by now, but there are SO MANY MISSED OPPORTUNITIES!
Sigh. Moving on.
Being exposed to spoilers meant I wasnât fooled by it, but it was still a deft bit of writing to have the dark rangers drink poison when cornered by Horde soldiers, then mention Nathanos having a vial in his coat, which he drinks when defeated--making the unspoiled reader assume heâs killing himself--only for it to be a kind of liquid hearthstone attuned to Sylvanas. Had I not known that he survived the book I would have freaked out there.
So, like, was Bolvar just sitting there on the ground awkwardly eavesdropping while Sylvanas and Nathanos talked/argued? Or did he use that time to sneak away unnoticed? LOL
Which brings us to the epilogue thatâs caused so much hand wringing and wailing from my fellow Blightrunner shippers. It wasnât the openly sentimental interaction between them that I had hoped for, but I honestly didnât read it as the doom of the ship. A bump, at worst.
[If youâre not interested in the relationship between Nathanos and Sylvanas, or if youâre one of those people who simply hate his character, you can skip the rest of this post.]
First of all, Sylvanas had just broken the Helm of Domination. That was a hugely significant thing to do, both for her personally and in the cosmic scheme of things. Her state of mind at that moment had to have been in a turmoil. So if she was a little distracted and tense, I think thatâs quite understandable.
Second, I saw other fans being upset that she threatened/wanted to strike him. Thatâs not how I read it at all.  âSylvanas could strike him, scream and hollow out his soul, but it would not correct the failing.â Sheâs not saying she wants to do that, just that she could. The instinct to lash out in violence is ingrained in all the undead; death knights have to do it or they go mad. So for her mind to go there in a moment of high emotion seems natural to me. She doesnât actually attack him or verbally/physically threaten him. People say things like âI could have killed my brother for eating the last slice of cakeâ or âI couldâve strangled my co-worker when she spoiled the ending of the movieâ and itâs not literal.
Third, she doesnât say âgo away, I never want to see you again.â She says âGo where you will, Nathanos, but do not be idleâ and âI expect you will return to me with means to prevent [Bwonsamdiâs] meddling.â So essentially sheâs saying, âFine, go home, regroup, come up with Plan B, and if itâs not possible to destroy Bwonsamdi at least concentrate on countering him.â Also note that she still considers the operation to be theirs, not just hers:  âThis was a blow, but one she felt sure they could overcome.â That tells me she expects to work with him in the future.
Fourth, and granted this is before she learns of his failure, but sheâs clearly happy to have him there when he first arrives.  ââMy champion,â Sylvanas purred. âYour timing could not be better. Tell me of your victory as we take these first steps together.ââ She wanted to cross into the Shadowlands with him at her side. Hell, thatâs bridal imagery...crossing the threshold together, and all that. The only reason she tells him to go is because his work isnât done and she still needs him on Azeroth. But she explicitly says âI expect you will return to me.âÂ
Fifth, in the line from her POV about how âthe unjust ladder of their lives must be dismantled,â the âtheyâ sheâs referring to is all of the denizens of Azeroth, true, but I think thereâs also a tinge of bitterness there as she looks back on her own life, and her life with Nathanos. Destiny has not been kind to either of them.
Sixth, she says âMy path lies aheadâ as she prepares to cross into the Shadowlands. Itâs a reminder of the scale of the forces she is trying to manipulate. When faced with the potential fates of all the souls in the universe, her own regrets are insignificant. She canât stay on Azeroth any longer, even if some part of her does want to just chill out on a beach somewhere with Nathanos and watch his blighthounds chase seagulls. She thinks âIt would not be easy, but then, her mission required great sacrifice.â Like leaving him behind.
Even this part can be interpreted different ways:  âShe heard the note of hope in his voice, fragile as a fledgling dropped from the next.â Putting aside the humor of comparing bird-hating Nathanos to a fledgling, we donât get a value judgment about the comparison. Sylvanas doesnât think about him sympathetically, wanting to protect him in a vulnerable moment, but she also doesnât think, âGeez, what a pathetic weakling.â It goes back to that bit in Warbringers about how she canât kill hope. And she canât. Here, again, no matter how bleak things are, no matter how displeased she is at his failure, he still has hope. And she needs that, whether she believes it or not.
When she âflicked her fingers, as if ridding herself of a speck of muckâ that can be interpreted as her thinking of him in a derogatory way, but she was also talking about Bwonsamdi in the same breath so I can choose to believe thatâs who she was being dismissive of.
I donât know.  I get that some of the language is discouraging.  She describes him as having âblubbering lipsâ and sheâs definitely not happy with him. But these two have been through a lot, and their bond has remained strong. Iâm sure this isnât their first fight, or the first time heâs disappointed her. This isnât the end for them. Just another bump on a very long highway theyâve traveled together.
...
OMG this has turned into a monster of a post, rambling all over the place. I hope itâs coherent enough to follow. Iâm just in lore overload at the moment (and enjoying every second.) I know Iâm forgetting things I wanted to talk about, too, but Iâm going to go ahead and post it as it is.
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