The Serpent is vanquished, and the Dragon is dead ...but has the endless strife that kept Aglirta a Kingless Land finally ended?
Hawkril the mighty warrior, Embra the beautiful sorceress, and Craer the crafty thief mourn their lost companion, but now must forge new alliances in their role as overdukes of Aglirta, a land that has been torn asunder by double-crossing royals, savage warlords, and sinister high priests.
Now the kingdom is threatened by a mystical berserker plague that is promoting anarchy among the citizenry while serpentine acolytes move in the shadows to try and resurrect a new Serpent.
Will a new dragon rise to vanquish it, and if so, who will it be, and can it avoid the fate of its predecessor?
The fate of Aglirta lies in balance in the triumphant conclusion of this cycle of Band of Four novels!
Ed Greenwood is the creator of the Forgotten Realms fantasy world, which became the setting for his home D&D game in 1975. Play still continues in this long-running campaign, and Ed also keeps busy producing Realmslore for various TSR publications.
Ed has published over two hundred articles in Dragon magazine and Polyhedron newszine, is a lifetime charter member of the Role Playing Game Associaton (RPGA) network, has written over thirty books and modules for TSR, and been Gen Con Game Fair guest of honor several times.
In addition to all these activities, Ed works as a library clerk and has edited over a dozen small press magazines.
Invented the character Elminster from the popular Forgotten Realms RPG series. Currently resides in an old farmhouse in the countryside of Ontario, Canada.
This series is like popcorn with uneven seasoning: you take a bite once and it's flavorless, then you take another and the salt is almost overpowering.
Truly, what an enjoyable mess.
P.S. I would not recommend this series, I don't think.
Well, I've finally finished the completely pointless series starring the Band of Four. That is a month that I'll never get back, and time that would have been much better spent doing almost anything. The hack-and-slash fantasy by Greenwood may be attractive and fun to some, but I think most will agree that these books represent nothing more than a distraction. No meaning, no purpose, no point, and by no means memorable, I wouldn't recommend these books to anyone, and now wish that I hadn't stumbled across them in my browsing of Amazon.
This final book, THE DRAGON'S DOOM, is actually better than the first three in the series, as Greenwood's writing seems to have smoothed out a bit, becoming somewhat more refined and coherent. The insanity of the first three books, where far too many characters and plots interweave in a mind-boggling confusion, is restricted here, as Greenwood makes a decent attempt to get the story focused enough to reach an almost-satisfying conclusion. That's not to say that the action slowed here, as this one is just as full of bloody fights and unexplainable sorcery as the others, but that this book was just tighter, keeping with only the most important characters. And even though this book did improve over its predecessors, it is still impossible to take seriously. The Band of Four still go from banter and jokes, to brutal savagery and total anguish, and then back to jovialness, at the blink of an eye. Its meant to be funny, the continual wittiness and light-heartedness of the characters, but it really leads to an eye-rolling, unsatisfying read.
I think Greenwood has potential as a writer, but until he takes his job a little more seriously, and stops trying to show how ironic and funny he can be, his books aren't going to be winning any awards. I don't see myself reading any more of his work, not after this disappointing experience. Definitely not recommended. Stay away from this series!