The Dark Queen (Dragonlance: Villains #6)
The long-awaited tale of the New York Times best-selling Dragonlance series' greatest villain--Takhisis, Queen of Darkness--follows her as she is worshipped by legions of evil beings and spends her time plotting to escape from the Abyss. Original.
Mass Market Paperback, 313 pages
Published
December 1st 1994
by TSR
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I saw this book at Savers and thought "how interesting!" A book about one of the most powerful villains in the Dragonlance series. Delving into what makes a villain such can be an interesting piece. Unfortunately, the authors got in over their heads!
Let me define a literary device for the authors: Incluing, the gradual exposure of the reader to the background of the story world. Building of clues.
The authors had NO CLUE what incluing was. In fact, I had no idea what was going on ever. It start...more
Let me define a literary device for the authors: Incluing, the gradual exposure of the reader to the background of the story world. Building of clues.
The authors had NO CLUE what incluing was. In fact, I had no idea what was going on ever. It start...more
For my high school and two of my college years, I was a huge fan of Forgetten Realms and Dragonlance. I mean huge. You have no idea how huge. I'm slightly embarassed by it now.
And then. And then, there kept coming books and more books. And everything got explained. Or demonizied. Or stupid. Or changed.
The Dark Queen was one of the better later Dragonlance books. It is largely forgettable though except for one thing. It is one of the few places I have seen a male elf fall in love with a human wom...more
And then. And then, there kept coming books and more books. And everything got explained. Or demonizied. Or stupid. Or changed.
The Dark Queen was one of the better later Dragonlance books. It is largely forgettable though except for one thing. It is one of the few places I have seen a male elf fall in love with a human wom...more
This book almost had the dubious honor of being the first book that I stopped reading it before I finished it. There seemed to be two main types of writing in this novel, rambling and environment descriptions. If the author was rambling on and on he was describing something in the book. I finished the whole novel and I still wasn’t sure what was going on. At some points the god Sargonnas was trying to stop Takhisis, next thing I know there is a brush fire destroying half of the Istarian army, an...more
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Michael Williams is an American author. He is known for his Dragonlance novels.
Williams was born and lives in Louisville, Kentucky. He has lived in Vermont, New York, New Jersey, Wisconsin, Ireland and England. His first novel, Weasel's Luck, was published in 1988. Currently, Williams teaches Humanities at the University of Louisville.
More about Michael Williams...
Williams was born and lives in Louisville, Kentucky. He has lived in Vermont, New York, New Jersey, Wisconsin, Ireland and England. His first novel, Weasel's Luck, was published in 1988. Currently, Williams teaches Humanities at the University of Louisville.
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