
Geeky Frignit |

ok - where's the preorder button for a book?
Agreed!!!! More explorations of Mendev and the Worldwound would be fantastic. I've also added The River Kings' Road to my Amazon wish list (Just placed an order yesterday. Will probably order this when I place my order for the next WoT book in November.

Liane Merciel Contributor |

I'm delighted and flattered that you guys liked the story. The reception's been incredible to me, and I'm grateful for all the comments.
But let us not overlook the art, which has been fantastic throughout. I loved the first piece but this one's even better (okay, sure, the costume is a little impractical, but sometimes you just gotta sacrifice practicality on the altar of Cool), and I am continually amazed by how well KyuShik Shin has brought the characters to life via art. It's great stuff.

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But let us not overlook the art, which has been fantastic throughout. I loved the first piece but this one's even better (okay, sure, the costume is a little impractical, but sometimes you just gotta sacrifice practicality on the altar of Cool), and I am continually amazed by how well KyuShik Shin has brought the characters to life via art. It's great stuff.
But didn't you already have her casting endure elements earlier in the story.... so who needs practical clothes?

The_Minstrel_Wyrm |

Allow me to echo the praises of my fellows when I say this has been a thoroughly enjoyable read (all parts) and I'd TOTALLY pre-order or, heck, outright buy a full length novel from the author.
What's that, you say the author has a novel available, it's just not set in Golarion. Well now... what fortuitous circumstance be this!
Dean; The_Minstrel_Wyrm

James Sutter Contributor |

But didn't you already have her casting endure elements earlier in the story.... so who needs practical clothes?
That's exactly what I said. In a world of magic, miniskirts are perfectly sensible in the strangest situations. Also, maybe there just wasn't enough bear or wolf pelt to make a whole outfit...

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What intrigued me more than anything in the story, "I hadn't felt so hopeless since Iomedae turned from me."
As an amature theologian, I found the choice of words interesting. As the old Footsteps story goes, it's not the Divine that turns from us, it's we who leave him. Does he beleive that she abandoned him? Or is he referring to whatever he did caused Iomedae to turn from him? It makes the character even more intriguing to me.

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What intrigued me more than anything in the story, "I hadn't felt so hopeless since Iomedae turned from me."
As an amature theologian, I found the choice of words interesting. As the old Footsteps story goes, it's not the Divine that turns from us, it's we who leave him. Does he beleive that she abandoned him? Or is he referring to whatever he did caused Iomedae to turn from him? It makes the character even more intriguing to me.
My reading is that he thinks he's done wrong by the faith and caused his goddess to turn. The tone of the story is that the guilt is for his actions that caused the rift rather than blaming the goddess for abandonning him.
[EDIT] Also agree 100% with both the praise for the story and with damnitall

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I'm delighted and flattered that you guys liked the story. The reception's been incredible to me, and I'm grateful for all the comments.
But let us not overlook the art, which has been fantastic throughout. I loved the first piece but this one's even better (okay, sure, the costume is a little impractical, but sometimes you just gotta sacrifice practicality on the altar of Cool), and I am continually amazed by how well KyuShik Shin has brought the characters to life via art. It's great stuff.
worthwhile descriptions tend to bring worthwhile art
of course there is also the need of an awesome artist for this, so you are right, honor where is honor is due, wonderful pieces of art :)
J D Dunsany |
Just thought I'd pop by to say how much I've enjoyed this story. Issues of faith interest me and I thought that particular aspect of the story was handled exceptionally well. It really brought a sense of depth to the tale and I was thoroughly engrossed right from the first page. I also really enjoyed it for its depictions of the crusade and the startlingly gritty areas of grey that exist in an endeavour that you expect to be more 'black and white'. (The encounters with the villagers were genuinely unsettling.) Excellent stuff and I hope you get to write again and again in the Pathfinder setting.
Yours,
JDD

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Lord, so many great comments on this story already, I hope I can find something worthy of adding!
Firstly, anyone who works at Paizo and has the ear of those in the hierarchy making decisions to hire (ha, hire-archy) authors for writing Pathfinder setting-based novels if you haven’t already TELL THEM TO GET LIANE MERCIEL TO WRITE A PATHFINDER NOVEL! I cannot stress this enough! This story was absolutely phenomenal! Hence the overuse of exclamations… Sorry about that, but if you read “Certainty” then I can’t see you likely to disagree that the exclamation points are more than deserved. Heck, this was so captivating it deserves a portable hole full of exclamation points. Maybe several…
Anyway, now that I have that out of my system, Liane you’re a beautiful writer, to say the least. This work (and though it may not be bound and printed, I say with all certainty that “Certainty” deserves to be described as a “work”) is intoxicating and I hope that you are given more opportunities to write for Pathfinder. I will be stumbling (can’t quite walk a straight line, I’m still intoxicated by the reading experience) over to your site to find out more about your novel and any other writings that might be referenced there. All luck and blessings to you as you continue revealing tales to us!
PS- KyuShik Shin, your artwork is amazing! I love your take on Jelani with as much fervor as I love your rendition of Tiberion in "Noble Sacrifice".
You know, all of you (writers and artists alike) are setting a high bar. What's wonderful is it's a high bar you all consistently clear. Keep up the great work!

Alephtau |

Really enjoyed this story. Think it is my favorite one of these, altho a couple of others come close.
One thing i am curious about is how did they get the Nexavar out of the wardstone? I would think that would be difficult to do, otherwise the wardstones would not be very affective if some random thief could just walk up and pound on the stone to get to the Nexavar.

Liane Merciel Contributor |

Psalmist - thanks for the compliments, and apologies for not checking up on this thread for so long. :)
One thing i am curious about is how did they get the Nexavar out of the wardstone? I would think that would be difficult to do, otherwise the wardstones would not be very affective if some random thief could just walk up and pound on the stone to get to the Nexavar.
Here's my thinking (NB this is NOT canon about the wardstones, because I don't get to make canon; it's just an explanation for that particular plot point):
Let's assume the wardstones are shielded with a boosted Magic Circle Against Evil (Level 3 on just about every spell list).
The Magic Circle effect prevents the demons of the Worldwound from getting close enough to claw the wardstones apart. I like this explanation because if the wardstones are linked to one another with a boosted version, that explains why demons are generally barred from passing through the barrier, but every once in a while one gets lucky on its save and then you have a solitary demon rampaging around Mendev until a crusader party takes it down. Go lowbie game go!! ALSO, and importantly for my personal worldbuilding preferences, it makes sense for the wardstones to have a mid-level, multi-list shield because a) just about every caster type can renew the protection by casting the base spell into the wardstone-as-amplifier (important during a crusade where your resources are stretched thin and you can't always rely on having a particular type of specialist caster around when you need one); and b) it's not super duper high level, because again, stretched-thin crusade means not having a Level 20 caster on call to fix a wardstone three times a week.
Anyway, that's why demons aren't tearing these things down right and left. They literally can't touch the things.
As for why human(oid) thieves aren't doing it, the reason is twofold. First, you actually do need a certain amount of magic to bypass the protections on the wardstone, and most people don't have access to that. Second, even if you DO have that capability, most sane thieves generally realize that it is in their own best interest to not have Mendev eaten up by the Worldwound. Every thief knows that in order for your stolen gold to be worth anything, you need to be in a society willing to recognize that gold has some value. You can't eat it, drink it, or burn it to stay warm at night, so if society goes down the drain, so does everything you worked so hard to steal.
And the Worldwound is another level of bad on top of that, because the reality-melting chaos of it means that sack of stolen gold might just grow a face (or twenty) and eat your hands off while you're holding it.
So that's why most thieves aren't sabotaging the wardstones to steal their nexavar. Self-preservation wins that calculation.
Of course, every once in a while, you might stumble across a bunch of unusually shortsighted and greedy thieves who think they can carve out a wardstone, sell the contents, and use the proceeds to flee before anyone catches on... but oops!, turns out bad things happen when you wreck the effect that had been protecting you a second ago.
That's my take, anyway. But it's not official or anything, just why the premise works inside my head. ;)

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No official ones that I'm aware of, but I sketched out a character sheet for the purposes of tracking spells. I left it unfinished, and of course it's not "real" unless Liane does a version.
If she ever wants to do one, I'll gladly send her my notes, but otherwise it stays in the ultra secret research folder.

Berselius |

One way to propitiate the heavens in this matter might be to propose a character-creation contest involving Liane's characters, including Jelani.
Well, I'm more of a fan of official stats myself so I'll just keep hoping Paizo comes out with some sort of codex for their iconic Pathfinder Tales NPC's.