World of Warcraft: "Wolfheart" novel description now available

Christie Golden's Thrall: Twilight of the Aspects, is currently on the shelves, chronicling Thrall's journey post-Cataclysm with the Earthen Ring and his counterpart Aggra, as well as the dragons and their quest to stay alive and allied during Deathwing's brutal return. With Wolfheart, it seems we're getting an Alliance leader's story opposed to that of Thrall, who was once the Horde's warchief.
World of Warcraft: Wolfheart is going to be available on Sept. 13, 2011. Hit the jump for the full description.
A slight movement in the opposite direction caught Eadrik's attention. The doe, acting only on her instincts and unable to meld those with common sense, had chosen an inopportune time to begin running again.[Thanks for the information, BlizzPlanet.]
The worgen lunged after her. Varian waited for a moment, then stepped from the tree. If Eadrik was here, the lord of Stormwind considered, then his master could not be far.
The bow once again ready, Varian moved in the direction from which Eadrik had come. The worgen hunted as a pack to a point. Being also men, those like Genn would seek their individual kills.
Varian retraced Eadrik's path, moving through the brush as readily as the worgen. His eyes constantly surveyed the vicinity and his ears and nose sought signs of his prey.
And at last he saw a worgen who could only be the Gilnean king. Genn flung himself after a massive boar with tusks so sharp and strong that, if the animal turned to face the worgen, Genn would truly risk death. At the moment, though, the boar thought only of flight.
Genn, however, was fast gaining. He ran sometimes on only his legs, but other times used his hands, too. With a litheness that Varian had not even seen from the much younger Eadrik, the veteran ruler closed on the boar.
Having measured the situation, Varian entered the fray. Although without the "benefit" of the curse, he moved with all the skill and pace of one who had survived more critical struggles than surely all the worgen combined. Yet, it was more than merely the reflexes of a former gladiator that served Varian now. Another force guided him, drove him in among the worgen as if he were one of their own and not simply a man. Others in the past had called him Lo'Gosh . . . and, at that moment, that name was more true of him than the one with which he had been born.
---
In the wake of the Cataclysm, conflict has engulfed every corner of Azeroth. Hungering for more resources amid the turmoil, the Horde has pressed into Ashenvale to feed its burgeoning war machine. There, acting warchief Garrosh Hellscream has employed a brutal new tactic to conquer the region and crush its night elf defenders, a move that will cripple the Alliance's power throughout the..
---
Unaware of the disaster brewing in Ashenvale, the night elves' legendary leaders, High Priestess Tyrande Whisperwind and Archdruid Malfurion Stormrage, conduct a summit near Darnassus in order to vote the proud worgen of Gilneas into the Alliance. However, resentment of Gilneas and its ruler, Genn Greymane, runs deep in Stormwind's King Varian Wrynn. His refusal to forgive Genn for closing his nation off from the rest of the world years ago endangers more than just the summit: it threatens to unravel the Alliance itself.
Varian's animosity is only one of many unsettling developments in Darnassus. An uneasiness creeps over the once-immortal night elves as the first of them fall victim to the infirmities of age. While they cope with their mortality, tensions flare over the reintroduction of the Highborne, formerly the highest caste of night elf nobility, into their society. Many night elves are unable to pardon the Highborne for the destruction unleashed on Azeroth millennia ago by their reckless use of magic.
When a murdered Highborne is discovered on the outskirts of Darnassus, Malfurion and Tyrande move to stop further bloodshed and unrest by appointing one of the night elves' most cunning and skilled agents to find the killer: the renowned warden Maiev Shadowsong. Yet with all that is transpiring in Darnassus, the Alliance might be powerless to stop the relentless new warchief Garrosh from seizing the whole of Ashenvale.
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Reader Comments (Page 2 of 8)
Tom Jul 21st 2011 10:50PM
To be fair, I don't actually dislike Knaak as much as my comment suggests, but I couldn't resist the wordplay.
There's no use in being angry about it. It's okay for people to not like something you like.
DonNochay Jul 21st 2011 11:10PM
@QM
You came here and got disgruntled about down/upvotes?
Yeah, the exit is that way --------------------->
Peebers Jul 21st 2011 9:29PM
oh dang it! all this new book info comin out after i just finished finally reading the shattering. oops!
Jennifer Jul 21st 2011 9:38PM
I'd pay good money if Blizzard would find a second real author for their books. Dump Haack and get someone decent.
Christie Golden is great, Haack needs to go.
Angelo Jul 21st 2011 9:50PM
Twilight of the Aspects, not Twilight of the Elements
Billlop Jul 21st 2011 9:51PM
You know, all the Knaak haters ive seen so far have been barely litterate, entitled assholes who i am honestly surprised can read at all.
Anyway I would like to say that Stormrage was the first Warcraft Novel i read. I loved it. Since then i have read every single Warcraft novel in print and i have to say that Knaak is actually a decent author. Christie has her charms and yes, Jess Grubb is probably my favourite but to call Knaak bad or a hack is just ignorant and disrespectful. Try showing some respect and not just spouting off the generic "KNAAAAAAK" argument.
I am looking forward to this and i hope to have much more knaak in the future :)
Billlop Jul 21st 2011 9:52PM
*Jeff Grubb is probably my favourite
Typing at 3am is NOT a good idea folks
QM Jul 21st 2011 10:10PM
Don't really agree with how scathing you were to Knaak's critics...
...I will agree with your point though. Knaak definitely comes across as an under-respected author on WoW Insider. Lament all you want about his characters being Mary Sues (even though those characters are created, guided, and developed by Blizzard itself), despise his wonky plot devices and loltimetravel all day (even though, once again, all that was done under the direction of Blizzard). But do not call Knaak a hack. He is one of the better authors around, and if he was such a hack, why the hell would Blizzard keep hiring him?
Honestly, the Knaak hate on this website reminds me a lot of the Twilight Hatedom. People scream KNNAAAAKK at the slightest provocation, and I almost never hear dissenting opinions. I'm pretty sure at least half the Knaak haters have never read a Knaak book, just like with Twilight.
It's become cool to hate Knaak on this website, and the complete irrationality of it makes me furious.
Matt P Jul 21st 2011 10:09PM
Knnak, aside from his fascination with using "orbs" for eyes, is a decent pop fiction writer. It's his lack of respect for existing lore that grates me. When he writes a story, it isn't nearly as immersive as a Golden book or Jeff Grubb's fantastic outing. His books aren't so much Warcraft stories as they are "Richard Knaak Presents: A Warcraft Tale."
Tom Jul 21st 2011 10:54PM
What Matt P. said.
Building on that, it's not just that Knaak has whatever weaknesses he might have - it's also that he gets compared to the other potential authors.
Harvoc Jul 21st 2011 11:26PM
And another person who seems to like Knaak but gets downvoted. Why do you people hate other's opinions?
Tom Jul 21st 2011 11:33PM
"Stormrage was the first Warcraft Novel i read. I loved it."
This is an opinion I don't have a problem with.
"all the Knaak haters ive seen so far have been barely litterate, entitled assholes who i am honestly surprised can read at all"
This is an opinion I do have a problem with. That's why he's being down-voted.
Angus Jul 21st 2011 11:37PM
Here's my problem with Knaak: I can write his plots with a D6.
Let me introduce the Knaak story generator!
(Note: any resemblance to the Timothy Zahn Star Wars plot generator are purely on purpose)
Main Plot:(Roll D6)
1-2: World in danger from never before seen force.
3-4: World in danger from established force.
5: World in danger due to a "good guy" actually being a bad guy.
6: Combine 2 of the above.
How are they doing it? (D6)
1: Time Travel!!!
2-4: Previously thought to be innocuous item
5: Item of untold power
6: Wizards.
Main Hero (D6)
1-5: Plucky unknown person with incredible power hidden deep inside.
6: Lore character that actually has been written as a hero.
Extras: (D6)
1-4: Major Lore heroes that should probably be the actual heroes and not the schmuck.
5: an odd assortment of minor characters from lore.
6: Someone he made up. Probably reminds you of uncle Bill, you know, the creepy one with the van.
Sub-plot:
1-2: Hero has to fight some sort of prejudice.
3-4: Hero has a love interest.
5: Massively important point for lore that will be completely blown off.
6: Potluck! Pick 2.
Love interest:
1-2: Brand new character that will be introduced and die all in one book.
3-4: Ridiculously powerful NPC that is established in Lore and deserves their own story
5-6: No one, it is instead their mom or some mentor that goes through a ton of trouble to save them.
Resolution:
1-2: "His Power Level is OVER NINE-THOUSAND!!!!!!!"
3-4: "Oh hey guys, don't mind me, just destroying your plans through a completely impossible device/manuever/ability that I happen to be able to do." (Like above but less flashy)
5-6: Wizards did it.
Matt P Jul 21st 2011 11:38PM
@Harvoc
Billlop's first paragraph is what did him in, not his opinion.
joe.gough Jul 22nd 2011 12:27AM
I'm the same. But War of Ancients was my first. Have read *everything* since. Knaak is actually my favourite... sorry but if read C.Golden say the phrase "he did %something% that belied his %something%" I am going to go mad. She is good for the most part, but in my opinion jabbers on about random unimportant filler stuff far too much and relies on that phrase about 50 times each book. very annoying.
anyway, imo she is overrated and Knaak is underrated. But hey this is the internet so opinions are pointless. Continue.
arkhan Jul 22nd 2011 12:29AM
Misspelling literate is always a plus.
Billlop Jul 22nd 2011 7:21AM
Yeah i would like to apologise for the first bit. It was 3am, i was very tired and every single comment before mine was hating knaak so i was a bit annoyed.
raingod Jul 22nd 2011 9:03AM
As a published author, with my own novel coming out this year, I'm also an editor, and imo Knaak is a horrible writer. Respect has to be earned, and Knaak's lack of ability certainly doesn't warrant any defense.
T Jul 22nd 2011 3:12PM
Barely litterate.
I'm enjoying this statement.
Lyinar Jul 21st 2011 9:55PM
AAAAAAAAARGH! Why couldn't they get Christie Golden or Keith R. A. DeCandido or Graham McNeill or some other GOOD author who's worked with Blizzard before?
I used to like Richard Knaak, as I had solely been exposed to Day of the Dragon. Then I read Stormrage.