After a century of imprisonment, demons have broken free of the wardstones surrounding the Worldwound. As fiends flood south into civilized lands, Count Varian Jeggare and his hellspawn bodyguard Radovan must search through the ruins of a fallen nation for the blasphemous text that opened the gate to the Abyss in the first place—and which might hold the key to closing it. In order to succeed, however, the heroes will need to join forces with pious crusaders, barbaric local warriors, and even one of the legendary god callers. It’s a race against time as the companions fight their way across a broken land, facing off against fiends, monsters, and a vampire intent on becoming the god of blood—but will unearthing the dangerous book save the world, or destroy it completely?
From best-selling author Dave Gross comes a new adventure set against the backdrop of the Wrath of the Righteous Adventure Path in the award-winning world of the Pathfinder Roleplaying Game.
400-page mass market paperback
ISBN–13: 978-1-60125-558-7
ePub ISBN-13: 978-1-60125-559-4
King of Chaos is also available as a digital edition on the following sites:
JoelF847
(RPG Superstar 2008 Top 32, 2011 Top 16)
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Dave Gross does it again! Another excellent entry in the adventures of Radovan and Varian, and the Pathfinder Tales series as a whole. This time picks up about a year after the previous book, Queen of Thorns, and has R&V heading to the Worldwound, a land plagued by demons. Along the way, the re-unite with their companion Oparal, the elf paladin, who gets promoted this time around to a main POV character. It was especially amusing reading her views on both R&V. Not as amusing as the third POV character from Master of Devils, but still a good addition. In addition, Gross weaves in an interesting cast of supporting characters, while combining elements from past books and stories in a way still very accessible to a new reader.
While the plot involves seeking a rare tome of twisted magic that might be able to help close the portal to the abyss that the demons are invading through, the core of the story is really about pushing the main characters to their limits and having them discover hidden truths about their innate natures. At the end of the book, there are some major changes to the characters (while still keeping true to their personalities.) I eagerly look forward to the next book, to see how these changes are further developed. I'm predicting either "Emperor" or "Ace" as part of the title.
About page 33 of the new Dave Gross Novel "King of Chaos" I realized it was part of a series. About page 44 I went ahead and ordered the other three books in the series, but since I was already hooked, I kept reading....
I like reading fantasy novels, sometimes including those set in a gaming universe. The problem with those is sometimes the authors are third tier , hired to crank out some hack books just to support the game side. Not so with Pathfinder Tales. James Sutter, the Editor, has taken great care to get some solid authors for his line of Pathfinder Tales fiction.
Now, sometimes the authors come out with a fantasy tale, which other than the setting, is not particularly ‘set” in that gaming universe. The characters don’t have “classes’, don’t use a lot of easily recognizable spells, and magic items are few and far between, unless they are a macguffin. This works as it gets in readers who don’t play that particular fantasy roleplaying game.
But as one of my friends was complaining, they don’t read as if they are set in one of those High Fantasy High Magic universes. I mean sure- the locations are there, but where’s the magic?
Well, this one does. There are scads of spells being tossed around here, not to mention magic items. Characters use scrolls, quaff healing potions, and fire spells which are clearly from the pages of the Player Handbook. Most of the characters (other than those with a mysterious secret background, of course!) are clearly identifiable as to their class, and those who track the spells, etc used can even get a fair guess as to level. Summoners summon their eidolons, wizards burn thru scrolls like it’s my Friday nite game, Paladins lay on hands, etc.
This is cool, fun & refreshing. And the combats! Ah here, Dave Gross excels! Our heroes are fighting a literal legion of demons from the depths, not to mention a despicable Undead Lord, who is definitely not sexy or sparkly.
In general, I am not fond of those books where the narrative shifts from character to character, but Dave handles that pretty well too, since the narrative stays with one of the three main Characters each chapter, and each is clearly labeled. I’ll also mention that our three main characters are well thought out with fascinating backgrounds and raison d'être .
Now yes, I imagine that those who don’t play Pathfinder or D&D might be a little lost (however there’s a complete glossary at the back) but those who do will love this book!
Dave Gross has outdone himself yet again with this recent installment in the ongoing story of Count Varian Jeggare and his bodyguard Radovan. My first experience with the Pathfinder Tales novels was with Dave’s first book in the series, Prince of Wolves and I was so impressed by his style of writing that I purchased Master of Devils, which didn't disappoint in the least.
The novel itself continues to take an alternating first person perspective both from Varian and Radovan, and like Master of Devils, it includes a third perspective, this time from the Elven Paladin, Oparal, who we met in the previous novel, Queen of Thorns. This style is one of the reasons I like the author as much as I do as it keeps the flow of the novel fresh. We get to experience the story from the viewpoint of different characters who have a very different take on the world around them. I wonder if Dave suffers from multiple personalities to be able to write in this style! Just kidding Dave!
Dave has become my favorite in the line of Pathfinder Tales authors, and I hope he keeps up the excellent work.
Is this the one the Paizo MMO kickstarter backers will get?
Affirmative.
Actually no. The kickstarter book will be by Rich Baker, and set in the bit of the River Kingdoms that PFO is going to be based in.
It'll be called 'The Crusader Road', and is probably another year off (it will probably come at the same time as Emerald Spire)
Enlight_Bystand is correct. This one has nothing to do with the MMO or Kickstarter.
King of Chaos is 100% spoiler free yet still associated with the Wrath of the Righteous Adventure Path. In a perfect world, every GM and player will enjoy the novel, get a taste of the region, and then play the AP. You can play the AP without reading the novel and vice versa, but it might be more fun to do both.
The revision has been submitted. Now it's up to James do to his magic and then loose the copy editors, which I always imagine being released rather like the Kraken.
You should be able to pick up King of Chaos cold and read it without knowledge of previous stories. That said, there are some pretty big plot developments from the previous Radovan & the count stories, and you'll see some characters from other authors' stories making appearances ranging from cameo to supporting cast.
Completists want to have read Prince of Wolves, Master of Devils, and Queen of Thorns. If you haven't read all of the web fiction and novellas, you probably want to add "Hell's Pawns" and "A Lesson in Taxonomy" to your list as well.
You want to read Liane Merciel's "Certainty" and probably also Nightglass, and Robin D. Laws' The Worldwound Gambit.
Most of the short stories are still available to read free, but please consider posting a review of your favorites. That helps readers who share your tastes find the stories they'll most likely enjoy.
Once I shake off this killer bug and catch up on a few small projects, I'll write some blogs guiding new readers through the growing opus.
The plot of this novel sounds like something that should happen "in game" by PCs; especially, especially if the main characters succeed in closing the Worldwound...
That is the number one problem I had with the Forgotten Realms novels (too many major plots solved by characters in a novel and not by PCs in a game session)...
I really hope that is not the case with this novel as it would set an unfortunate precedent IMHO...
Love the Pathfinder Tales line of books I have them all up to Liar's Blade. So next up Is Pirate's Honor of course. Just wanted to say thank you to all the Author's for these great book's I treasure. And to you Dave Gross, it started with Hell Pawns and from then I was hooked. So I'm very much looking forward to the next book with Radovan & The Count. Keep up the good work man, that go's for all The great Author's writing for The Pathfinder Tales book's.
I just found out about this upcoming book!
Desna smiles.
I wish I could pre-order the ePub.
Just two weeks ago I read Prince of Wolves and was hooked.
So all of my reading time for the last 2 weeks was taken up by everything Dave has written. (Finished Queen of Thorns last night) and I fully understand why Dave is a fan favorite.
Well, Winter Witch is next, but I will definitely add "Certainty," Nightglass, and The Worldwound Gambit to my queue.
You may be able to read King of Chaos cold, but reading everything that came first would be well worth your time.
Desna smiles.
I wish I could pre-order the ePub.
Just two weeks ago I read Prince of Wolves and was hooked.
So all of my reading time for the last 2 weeks was taken up by everything Dave has written. (Finished Queen of Thorns last night) and I fully understand why Dave is a fan favorite.
...
Thanks for the kind words. Maybe you'd like to join us over here today for a free-for-all Q&A. The reason for the meeting is another line of books, but it's called Ask Me Anything, so Pathfinder Tales is a totally legitimate topic.
Dave, I love your books. I have read Prince of Wolves and Queen of Thorns. I know now that these are out of order but I needed to get an elf fix. I am going to go back and read the 2nd book! Thanks for these wonderful works.
Dave, I love your books. I have read Prince of Wolves and Queen of Thorns. I know now that these are out of order but I needed to get an elf fix. I am going to go back and read the 2nd book! Thanks for these wonderful works.
You are very welcome, and thanks for the kind words.
If you need more stories to fill the time before King of Chaos arrives, check out the ePub stories (you can convert them to mobi format easily, if you want to read them on a Kindle) available here.
I'm particularly fond of "Husks," but "Hell's Pawns" is where it all started. All of the shorter works are still available for free, with gorgeous artwork, on the Web Fiction page, too.
Don't forget the dozens of other great stories by other authors, all of them still free to read online. Browsing them is a great way to decide which novel you'd like to try next.
That's a really pretty cover! Who is the artist? The Spiral of Pharasma in the back really grabs the eye. I am interested to see what the rest of the picture is; the part that wraps around the spine and onto the back cover*.
But I must ask
spoiling questions.:
Why is Radovan fighting Oparal? I thought they were friends.
I was going to write, "Why is Radovan fighting Oparal in a ruined temple of Pharasma?" The obvious answer is: "Because the battle between Radovan and Oparal takes place in a ruined temple of Pharasma."
I am certainly looking forward to this story.
*:
I like that the cover art for the novels is a single picture that wraps all the way from front cover to back cover. I always find the back of the book intersting to look at. Maybe not as interesting as the front, but interesting nonetheless.
Prince of Wolves and Queen of Thorns are great but many of you seem to have missed Master of Devils. So read all three to get the full story.
Anyways, I like Radovan but I'm a Varian Jaeggare man myself. Brute strength and cunning are great but I'll take brains over brawn any day of the week.
I find it funny how the king of chaos i riding a sweet magical unicorn "oh what will the king of chaos do next?" maybe he will fly on rainbows next. oh what joy. just kidding i love it!