WoW.com reviews Richard A. Knaak's Stormrage

The last book we reviewed here on WoW.com was Arthas: Rise of the Lich King. It was written by Christie Golden and was a little over three hundred pages of Prince Arthas Menethil's personal history, from his childhood to his fall to the Scourge. If that's what you're expecting out of Richard A. Knaak's Stormrage, drop those expectations. All of that can be found in the War of the Ancients trilogy. Despite the similar naming scheme, Stormrage is a novel that takes place at the same time as the events going on in Wrath of the Lich King. It's specifically stated that the Wrath Gate incident has already happened by the time the events in this novel begin. This isn't backstory, this is buildup to Cataclysm.
The beginning of the novel doesn't waste much time bringing you into the story. Very little time is spent on exposition pertaining to the main plot. There is some time taken to introduce characters readers may be unfamiliar with such as Broll Bearmantle and Thura, a female orc warrior who happens to be the niece of Broxigar and Varok Saurfang. The plot itself is made quite clear, however: Malfurion Stormrage is lost in the Emerald Nightmare and he is dying.
As you might have gleaned from the Stormrage preview Simon and Schuster released, this story is not exclusively about Malfurion. That's only one part of the story, and I would go as far as to say it's a relatively minor part. The book addresses a number of Night Elven plots and storylines that have been hanging loose for years now. The Emerald Nightmare, the corruption of Teldrassil, Fandral Staghelm's role in Night Elven society and his obsession with Morrowgrain all play prominent roles, and I would say all of that is far more interesting than the intitial journey to save Malfurion. The novel spans far more than just Elven territory, too. The story spans the entire world, bringing in key figures from the Horde and the Alliance. Varian Wrynn is a strong presence in the novel, for example.
One of the complaints often leveled at Richard Knaak's Warcraft novels is that they're rather disconnected from the overall story of Warcraft. His books include important antagonists such as Deathwing and Queen Azshara, he's the one that introduced the various Dragonflights, but you rarely see any of the primary protagonists from the rest of the Warcraft universe standing on their own two feet. Original characters such as Rhonin, Krasus and Kalec steal the stage. While Stormrage is no exception on that front, you might find it promising that Richard Knaak does use a number of somewhat obscure, existing characters to fill out the cast.
Right alongside Broll Bearmantle and Hamuul Runetotem, druids that have made frequent appearances in the expanded universe, Stormrage reintroduces us to lesser known druids like Naralex and Arch Druid Renferal. Even Goldshire's Marshal Dughan makes an appearance. As strange as it may sound, this sequence was actually one of my favorites from the novel by a wide margin. It's light, it's fun, and Marshal Dughan leading a band of soldiers against a mine full of kobolds felt more heroic than many of the more dire battle sequences in the novel. It had the most Warcraft feel to me. There was drama and there was action, but there was also a light, almost humorous tone to break it up and keep it from becoming tedious. That's what I feel Warcraft is, and these cameos nail it.
There are other examples of this throughout the novel. Green dragons from Warcraft past make appearances, and without giving too much away, you'll run into notable NPCs that you probably haven't thought of since you last leveled a character through Ashenvale. These moments are, without a doubt, the most enjoyable sequences in the novel. It's not a matter of nostalgia, but rather embracing the little things that enrich the world. These sequences are done very well. Richard Knaak has the capacity to tap into what makes Warcraft such an enjoyable universe, and this proves that. I get the impression that he sat down and played the actual MMO to get inspiration for these scenes rather than digging through the Warcraft library. It's noticeable and it's appreciated.
However, a majority of the novel is very different from those few cameos. It is, essentially, standard Richard Knaak fare. Whether that's a good thing or a bad thing is really up to the reader. His original characters for this novel are still bothersome heroes that our standby Warcraft figures couldn't have lived without. Lucan Foxblood, a new character introduced in this novel, is particularly irritating in both concept and execution, background and personality. It made me long for Rhonin, and if you're at all familiar with my writing here on WoW.com, you'll understand that what I am saying is not a compliment. I found it difficult to get through all 400 pages of this novel.

It's easy to say Richard Knaak didn't pay enough attention to the source material, but at this point he's had control of Tyrande Whisperwind more than Blizzard themselves have. So which is the valid interpretation of the character? The strong, outspoken version of her that Blizzard created or the calmer, quieter version Knaak uses? Blizzard's Tyrande is someone comfortable with their power and willing to lead when leading needs to be done. Richard Knaak's Tyrande is someone that strikes me as uncomfortable with who she is, someone that feels they need to keep secrets lest they be looked at funny. Either way, the character in Stormrage is not the Tyrande we saw in Warcraft III. Take that as you will.
If you liked Richard Knaak's previous work, you will love Stormrage. If you didn't like Richard Knaak's previous work, this won't change your mind about it. It's the same as ever. Same strengths, same flaws. Should you buy it? I can't tell you yes or no, that's your decision. While I enjoyed parts of it, I didn't particularly enjoy the overall story. It was dry, I found it hard to care about what most of the main characters were saying or doing due to their lack of compelling characterization, and the language Richard Knaak uses, archaic and overwrought, often strikes me as trying too hard. He tries to be poetic, but it actually comes across quite silly. Reading about druids shapeshifting into flight form in full detail every few pages for the first half of the novel was particularly grating. The heroes are absurd, and the villains might as well be twisting their mustaches. It is not very complex.
Despite all of that, I do recommend reading it eventually. A lot of the events in this novel will be reflected in Cataclysm and other future World of Warcraft content. Those that never read the World of Warcraft comics were dumbfounded when Varian Wrynn made his return to Stormwind in-game without much fanfare. How did he get there? What happened? Stormrage will make that look like small potatoes. Read it, but if you've never read any of Richard Knaak's Warcraft novels (especially War of the Ancients) before, keep Wowwiki handy. You'll need it.
Filed under: Analysis / Opinion, Lore
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Reader Comments (Page 5 of 6)
Mordockk Feb 23rd 2010 2:44PM
Does this guy have a real knaak for writing good novels?
vanye111 Feb 23rd 2010 4:07PM
No.
deweymaverick Feb 23rd 2010 2:53PM
Thanks for the reply!
In a way that's bittersweet news. Its good to know that we're getting new stuff.
That said, I don't really care for Knaack's writing that much... so I'm a bit sorry to hear that he's the one doing it.
But again, thanks for the time.
maclean37 Feb 23rd 2010 3:02PM
I have had my copy for about a week, and having a druid as my main character, the parts I have paid the most attention to are the very druid-centric ones... many different characters are woven into this tale and it was satisfying in the end. My primary complaint is that weaving in SO many characters made the read rather blocky and somewhat hard to follow as to who is doing what and where they are at any given time. That could have been simplified a great deal and still been a satifying read.
I would have liked to see more character development on Thura, the orc... She should have had quite some different reactions than she did upon discovering the truth... no matter what the motives, her sacred beliefs were meddled with, and that generally does not not elicit the 'shrug' response that she seems to have had.
and as for the last part.... all I will say here so as not to spoil anything is after 10,000 years, it's about bloody time! ::chuckle::
And being a lore nerd and druid, I definitely recommend this to read, even with its issues. :)
Irem Feb 23rd 2010 9:09PM
The "shrug" reaction is something I've seen from Knaak's characters before. I don't think diving into complex emotional reactions from characters is really one of his strengths, which is disappointing when it's something fans have been waiting for. He handled Vereesa's reaction to finding out that Sylvanas was the Banshee Queen with a few sentences that amounted to /shrug "I don't really want to deal with it and probably never will."
Stealthfire Feb 23rd 2010 3:24PM
"...and the language Richard Knaak uses, archaic and overwrought, often strikes me as trying too hard. He tries to be poetic, but it actually comes across quite silly."
This, this, a thousand times this. There are some authors that can spend pages describing trees or rocks or something and you don't really mind, because the writing is beautiful enough to warrant the halt in narrative. Knaak on the other hand--I don't know, there's just something I absolutely cannot stand about his writing style. It's like reading bad fanfiction.
I've read both Day and Night of the Dragon, but the Ancients trilogy is sitting on my desk collecting dust--I'm sure I'll read it someday when the power goes out and I'm bored out of my skull, but that's probably it. I might read this just because I play a druid, but going from the excellent Arthas novel to more Knaak will be...painful.
evil_mike Feb 23rd 2010 5:06PM
Man am I glad to see that other people feel the same way about this author's work. I thought the WoW comic was decent (not great, but about what I'd expect from Wildstorm), but the War of the Ancients novels? Ugh. I couldn't even get through the first book!! I read RA Salvatore for fun and, while his writing style sometimes bothers me, he's freakin' Shakespeare compared to Knaak.
On another note, if you want to read some really GOOD licensed science fiction and/or fantasy, I recommend Drew Karpyshyn's Mass Effect novels and David Gaider's Dragon Age novels. It's no surprise that the books written by lead writers for ME and DA are *gasp!* well written, but I WAS surprised at just HOW well written they actually were. Highly recommended.
Stealthfire Feb 23rd 2010 8:34PM
I actually just read Karpyshyn's Mass Effect novels last week. I thought they were enjoyable enough--nothing mind-blowing but definitely a fun read for fans of the games, and certainly better than Knaak's books. I really ought to finish Dragon Age, but first I'd have to put down ME 2--I just started my third ME run that I'll probably blast through just so I can import it to the second game. I have discovered that I am a horrible Adept--but I'm horrible at playing casters in WoW, so I don't know why I'm surprised. Singularity is awesome though.
SarahTheGnome Feb 24th 2010 6:25AM
Ooh Stealthfire, how much I agree. I am a huge Robert Jordan fangirl, and yes, I do know there are as many haters as lovers out there of his books. But I ADORE his longwinded descriptions, how I can taste the food, smell the air, touch the stone, it all becomes real to me. And then there's Knaak. He FORCES everything on me, but it does nothing. It is even... laughable at times. I remember the first book I read, and after 20 pages I just thought 'god, does this person write using a thesaurus on every word?'. It did not flow naturally at all, it did not serve its intended purpose, it just made reading even more tiring.
Nope, not a fan at all.
Loopy Garou Feb 23rd 2010 4:11PM
"Before we begin, in the interest of full disclosure...."
You guys are so cute. All that bending over backward just because you received a review copy of a book? It's endearing — I really mean that — but hardly necessary. Every book, movie, music album, video game, etc. that gets reviewed anywhere involves someone getting a review copy. It's not a conflict of interest. I used to write/edit for a small local print publication, and our office received, I dunno, 50-60 free books a week. It's not a big deal guys, really. Ebert gets to see lots of free movies; that doesn't mean the studios expect him to only write positive reviews. (They hope, certainly, but that's neither here nor there.)
I'm just sad you guys have to give away your meager press perks. :(
Artificial Feb 23rd 2010 4:53PM
It doesn't sound like he'd really want to keep it.
Urth Feb 23rd 2010 4:30PM
I'd much rather read a novel about Ratshag and The Purge's adventures in Dire Maul, or about the perils of Lakeshire from the perspective of clumsy Hilary. I share the reviewer's opinion that the best bits of WoW are the small ones.
The Goldshire constabulary confronts kobolds and demon-possessed children? Mankrik's My Little House in the Barrens? Asric and Jadaar go to Booty Bay? More please!
Destron Feb 23rd 2010 5:00PM
I wholeheartedly agree. To me, the interesting things are in the details. How does a peon feel about his caste-based society when examining the comparative social mobility of goblins or Forsaken? What do the peasants of Stormwind think about the war in Northrend?
Unfortunately, I don't think the majority of fans share that interest.
Ringo Flinthammer Feb 23rd 2010 4:37PM
Sounds like another novel to read a synopsis of over at WoWwiki.
kaelzhang559 Feb 24th 2010 11:43AM
I totally agree your view on Tyrande's characterization. It's not like she experienced 10000 years as the leader of the nightelf, it's like just a few years after WotA(Knaak wrote it a few years ago).
The WotA Tyrande was just a young nightelf girl. So I understand she act so differently than WC3.
But 10000 years passed, I think the WC3 Tyrande is better as a brave and a little bit savage leader. About the Stormrage novel one, I agree to put some struggle on her, some of them are very good so I can accept them even she's not as good as the WC3 Tyrande. But later Knaak didn't do a good job on building her character, all she did is calling her goddess, fight satyrs, got captured over and over again, too pale and ideal, pretty much like many female characters in Knaak's other novels.
Varielle Feb 23rd 2010 6:15PM
Ugh. I really miss the Warcraft III Tyrande and night elves. They might have been pricks sometimes, but at least they did -something-. Now it seems all Tyrande does is stand around in the Temple weeping over Malfurion's absence, and the night elves themselves don't make any progress at all.
Fletcher Feb 24th 2010 3:06AM
I have to concur with this - in WC3 Tyrande wore full plate and rode about on a giant tiger. She was actually pretty badass, even if she was a filthy traitor who released Illidan from his prison. Now she's tucked away upstairs in the Temple of the Moon and wears a pretty dress, and it's all "I heed the voice of Elune" instead of "Warriors of the night, ASSEMBLE!"
AudreyR Mar 6th 2010 11:04PM
Haven't gotten far in the novel yet, but what you're saying I can expect from Tyrande in it is the same thing I can go to Darnassus in game and see? Gotcha.
Siaperas Feb 23rd 2010 6:28PM
Yeah, I kind of have the impression that Knaak should write action movies or action oriented comic books. He's really big on the action. It's not bad, I'm sure I could do no better, but it's in no way the best thing ever written either. I've been working through War of the Ancients, and people cannot take 2 steps before something major happens, like a demon popping up under a rock, or a lightning god flying by with coffee or something. Actually, now that I think about it, WoW is a lot like that. You can't ride in any direction for 1 minute before you run into something that wants to kill you; maybe he is accurate to WoW.
All and all, I'm of the opinion that if you like a very action oriented novel, Knaak tends to not let you down. But if you want something with a little more depth, Knaak may not be the best for you. Alex is right when he says this will play a part in the game world. Blizz has been pretty big in incorporating all of their stories into their lore, even the action figures, so if it happens here, it'll be something to affect the game.
Kylenne Feb 23rd 2010 8:39PM
I've been saying for years that Richard Knaak is the unholy lovechild of Michael Bay and Kevin J. Anderson.