For half-elven Pathfinder Varian Jeggare and his devil-blooded bodyguard Radovan, things are rarely as they seem. Yet not even the notorious crime-solving duo is prepared for what they find when a search for a missing Pathfinder takes them into the gothic and mist-shrouded mountains of Ustalav. Beset on all sides by noble intrigue, mysterious locals, and the deadly creatures of the night, Varian and Radovan must use both sword and spell to track the strange rumors to their source and uncover a secret of unimaginable proportions, aided in their quest by a pack of sinister werewolves and a mysterious mute priestess. But it’ll take more than merely solving the mystery to finish this job. For shadowy figures have taken note of the pair’s investigations, and the forces of darkness are set on making sure neither man gets out of Ustalav alive...
From fan-favorite author Dave Gross comes a new fantastical mystery set in the award-winning world of the Pathfinder Roleplaying Game.
368-page mass market paperback.
ISBN–13: 978-1-60125-287-6
A sample chapter of Prince of Wolves is available here. (72 KB zip/pdf)
Prince of Wolves (2010) by Dave Gross was the first of the Pathfinder Tales novels, a series of novels published by Pathfinder RPG publisher Paizo, and set in their Golarion campaign setting. I believe it’s fair to say that the primary target of this product line was the Pathfinder RPG enthusiast, but that none of the parties involved would object if their popularity spread much farther afield.
In the special thanks, Gross mentioned Erik Mona putting “a bug in his ear in Calgary,” suggesting to me that the Paizo staff were confident enough in his abilities not just to tell a good story, but to communicate the spirit of Golarion -- a task in which I believe he succeeded, with a few miscues along the way.
The novel was set in the country of Ustalov, the Golarion analog of TSR’s old Ravenloft. The Vistani are there, but they’re Varisians now. The swirling mists, as well. The Tarokka has been reborn as the Harrow deck. Ustalov felt so familiar that you expected to stumble across Strahd, himself. But there is no Strahd or Van Richten. Not yet. Perhaps the mists will deposit them here soon. This was where Gross’ novel succeeded. Ustalov is a scary place.
Gross’ other triumph here was that he told a passable detective story. I love Sax Rohmer, Arthur Conan Doyle, and Jim Butcher. They told great detective stories. Gross told a really good one. I enjoyed the way Gross fed us the clues. I enjoyed getting the a-ha at the same time as Dave’s protagonists. And there were only a couple of places where a revelation stretched my suspension of disbelief. Heck, Doyle did worse than that.
Finally, Gross created a delightful pair of protagonists in Jegarre and Radovan. In their debut, Hell’s Pawns, I loved how they played off one another. Manipulating and playing friendly mind games with one another. Familiar, yet formal. Moonlighting without the romantic tension.
The first place the novel stepped wrongly, in my opinion, was when he chose to split up the party. Jegarre and Radovan were less interesting to me on their own. The courtly world of Jegarre dragged without Radovan to make fun of its foilables. Radovan wasn’t as fun a figure with his new companions, and their relationships were less believable. The chemistry that made Hell’s Spawn crackle and pop took a break for a large portion of the novel, and I missed it badly. The last chapter indicated that in future stories they would be friends instead of boss and investigator. That’s too bad.
The second place where Gross misstepped was having Radovan repeatedly use pejorative labels to describe the deformed villagers. (The novel was written in first person.) While I had no objection to Gross’ use of deformed characters, and though I believed their presence contributed to the horrific atmosphere, the repeated use of the word “freak” was offensive to me. Once or twice was enough to establish Radovan’s insensitivity with the reader. The additional uses saddened me, and detracted from an otherwise enjoyable read.
When I was trying to decide how to rate this book, I kept asking myself if I should rate it as “game fiction” or “regular fiction.” Game fiction has gotten a bad rap. Perhaps deservedly so. For game fiction, it’s five stars. Gross’ contribution is definitely at the top of the game fiction genre. In the broader context, I would still give this passable yarn a four.
The first person dialog really turned me off to this book. Had it been the first book in the Pathfinder tales that I read, I would have been turned off by it. As it was I started with Winter Witch and really enjoyed this book as well as Plague of Shadows
The only part that really redeems this book is Radovan and the Witch Azra. I really felt myself drawn to both of them but was sad in the end as it did not end as I wanted or wished it would have.
If you like first person or cheap detective novels you might enjoy this book. But this book to me in no way lives up to the Pathfinder name or quality.
First off, the star rating system is far too unclear. Four stars - to me- mean that this is a really good book! Buy it and you won't be sorry, particularly if you have avoided fantasy fiction based on RPG settings because of past disappointments. Paizo Publishing is blessed with good writers both internally and under contract, and their quality shows in "Prince of Wolves." Mr. Gross' prior work, "Hell's Pawns", though as comfortable serialized in the "Council of Thieves" adventure path as Kareem Abdul-Jabbar vacationing at Procrustes' Bed and Breakfast, was compelling enough to make me want to explore his work further. "Prince of Wolves" is a well crafted and well written adult story. It was engrossing from start to finish.
"Prince of Wolves" is the story of Varian Jeggare, nobleman detective, and his rough trade hellspawn bodyguard, Radovan. They travel to the haunted land of Ustalav in search of a member of Jeggare's organization, the Pathfinders, who has disappeared on the trail of a mysterious relic. Their voyage takes a sharp left turn and the two are forced to struggle on their own through a land rife with intrigue, cults, and monsters.
The story is revealed in alternating first person, with Radovan and Jeggare as narrators. Radovan's casual voice is easy to read, while some may struggle with Jeggare's dry, pedantic style. But for a nobleman to whom "I'm glad you're not dead" is an embarassingly effusive outburst of emotion, the style is perfect. Those accustomed to easy-read adventure stories may find this offputting, but this is a book, not a movie. The reader is expected to invest some effort into the reading in return for a richer and more rewarding experience than being spoon-fed entertainment.
The book takes us through a land much like those in the old vampire and werewolf movies, and the author gives those classic movies a friendly nod in several places. He slyly lulls the reader into believing they know what comes next, just before events take off in unexpected ways - a nice bit of misdirection. Mr. Gross makes the lands and the characters come alive, masterfully handling descriptions of monsters and magic so they flow naturally into the story, yet are completely accessable to a reader unfamiliar with Paizo's Golarion setting.
On the downside, part of Varian Jeggare's narration is forced into 'tell' mode rather than 'show' mode so every reader understands where the story is taking place and why. The action bogs down for a while in a morass of new names and places. This is a brief lull before the book regains its generally lively footing. One disclosure at the end seemed out of the blue, but upon rereading of the last two chapters, the foreshadowing was there, but subtle. Mr. Gross is more fair to his readers than Conan Doyle ever was, allowing the audience enough information to figure things out for themselves, or at least come close to an explanation. The few motivational questions or loose threads that appear are answered or woven in nicely. The author does not shy from descriptions of violence, sex, and gore, though they are handled tastefully.
I look forward to more Pathfinder Tales and anything from Mr. Gross.
Written by "fan favorite" Dave Gross, you are introduced to a half elf Pathfinder and his Teifling bodyguard. The book takes place in Ustalav, a Gothic Horror setting. As you might guess from the title, werewolves feature fairly prominently in the story. I would rate this as a Teen+ book, highly enjoyable to all ages above 13. It's a PG-13 under the MPAA.
Really fun read!
As a new initiate to the world of Pathfinder, this was a bit deep into the culture and elements for a first read, but certainly not enough to dissuade me from finishing and buying the second book…!
I especially enjoyed the alternating chapter perspectives from the characters, clever mechanic considering the degree of differences in the two characters ;)
I just wrapped up this first novel and look forward to diving into the next four sitting on my shelf.
This was a great story mixed with some decent writing. Definitely some room for improvement, but you can see the beginnings of a great universe starting to unravel.
It's also a great read while doing the Carrion Crown AP. It's provided some great insight into the country of Ustalav and helped create some fun moments. Good job!
I believe four stars is a good rating for this book. It's true that the start was a little slow and somewhat hard to follow but that may be a failing on my part for not being able to keep up with the names.
If you haven't read Prince of Wolves all the way though then you can't really give a true option of it. The action in it is a bit slim, preferring to focus on the mystery side of the land of Ustalav, which was a refreshing change from what I've been reading.
I would recommend this book to anyone wanting to play or DM the Carrion Crown Adventure path. It will give you a great feel for the country side. I have just picked up the second book by Dave Gross and look forward to continuing my adventure with the Pathfinder and his Hell spawn.
To honest it took me three goes to get into this book. I received it in late February but only yesterday able to read past the start. The beginning is a little too slow fir my liking but after the first couple of chapters it picks up. A good solid read and a great start to the tales line of Pathfinder products from Paizo.
This book isn't terrible, but it's a cut below the writing that can be seen in the rule books and modules. I'm not too big a fan 1st person perspective, and I found the character's internal monologue to be unconvincing. A younger reader probably wouldn't split hairs in the same way, and would probably be very happy with the comic-bookish action and story flow. I put it down about 1/3rd of the way through.
I love Radovan.
Dennis Baker
(RPG Superstar 2010 Top 16, Contributor)
—
When I first picked up this book I struggled to get into the story. The first chapter is a very painful read-though of a really long, boring letter with no action. Then it transitions to some court intrigue which nearly made me put the book down...
I am glad I pushed through the frustrating bits, the book overall is an excellent read with lots of likeable characters and a good bit of well exciting, cinematic action sequences. There is also just the perfect amount of romance in the book as far as I'm concerned (which is to say enough where it drives plot in fun ways without getting sloppy).
This is somewhere between 3-4 stars for me due largely to the slow start. Radovan and some of the secondary characters really bring this story alive.