First chapter of new Wolfheart novel free to read
The Sept. 13 publication date of Wolfheart, the newest WoW novel written by Richard Knaak, draws ever closer. We know surprisingly little about it at the moment. We know that it will take place on Kalimdor but will focus on King Varian Wrynn and his relationship with the wolf spirit Goldrinn and the new members of the Alliance, the Worgen. If you're eager for more information though, you're in luck. Shelfari, a book wiki run by Amazon.com, has the first chapter of the book available to read.
Click here for your free sample chapter and choose the Read First Chapter Free button below the picture of the book cover on the left side of the page. You'll be able to read the first chapter, as well as the chapter titles for the book (by pushing the back arrow on the pages). There are going to be a lot of spoilers in both the chapter names and the chapter itself, of course, so read at your own risk. For a quick (spoiler-filled) summary and a discussion of the possibilities, check after the break.
Chapter summary
The chapter starts with an Orcish expedition to Northrend. Apparently, Garrosh has ordered them to secure some sort of monster from Northrend to unleash on the Night Elves in Ashenvale. As the chapter opens, they are loading tarp-covered cages full of the monsters in question onto their ships. It's not clear what the monsters are. They seem to be to be huge, powerful, and angry, though, as one of them manages to grab two Orcs and crush them to death through the bars of its cage while they try to load it onto their ships. The Orcs only barely manage to pacify it by using sleeping powder of some sort. With the final cage loaded, they set sail back to Kalimdor.
The scene changes to the Night Elves' high priestess and leader, Tyrande Whisperwind, as she strolls through the temple gardens of Darnassus, meditating on the problems of the Cataclysm and the renewed Horde offensive. We learn that Tyrande, realizing that Malfurion won't be any long-term help in keeping the Alliance together, has called a summit to discuss the future of the Alliance. Unfortunately, many have not answered the summons yet, including Stormwind. As she thinks on all this, Elune sends her a vision.
She sees the War of the Ancients once again. The forces of the Burning Legion are pressing forward, ravaging the land. But there are no defenders, no Night Elves or their allies to stop them. Suddenly a mighty howl sounds, and Goldrinn, the wolf ancient, appears on the battlefield. But he is not alone, for a vast pack of wolves race forward with him. The wolves and Goldrinn fight the demons and appear to have the edge at first, but the demons quickly target Goldrinn and overwhelm him, killing him. As Goldrinn dies, a dark brown wolf leaps up, kills the demons who killed Goldrinn, and begins leading the wolf army in his stead.
The dark brown wolf rallies his companions, and they begin to push the legion back. But as Tyrande watches, the scene changes. The dark brown wolf turns into a Human man wielding a greatsword and clad in heavy armor. With him, the other wolves changed to Human forms as well. At the same time, the demons themselves shift and change into Orcs.
The vision ends with the Human warrior fighting an Orc dual-wielding axes. The Orc dies quickly to the Human's blade, and as he does, the rest of the Orcs die as well. The Human warrior stands triumphant with his comrades. The chapter ends as the warrior's face, at first shrouded, comes into view.
But what does it mean?
I'm rather amazed at how much this one chapter seems to suggest about the current lore and the direction of the Horde and Alliance in general. The identity of whatever monster the Orcs are transporting is up for a lot of speculation. It could, in theory, be some massive Scourge monsters, but I don't think Garrosh is that twisted. He has enough troubles with Sylvanas' blight as it is. Yeti or Magnataur seem to be the most likely options. They're both huge, and despite their semi-sentience, bad-tempered enough to attack anyone who's not one of them.
Of course, the other option is that they're Vrykul or even feral Worgen from Grizzly Hills. These would be an interesting way of attempting to sow discord or dismay in Alliance ranks, by trying to turn the other races against the Worgen in the latter case or by forcing Humans to fight their progenitors again in the former case. Still, the Night Elves have a pretty intimate knowledge of the Worgen curse by now, so feral Worgen might be dealt with too quickly. I'm still leaning toward Yeti or Magnataur.
Tyrande's vision brings up even more intriguing issues. Elune sent her a vision that directly compares the Orcs to the Burning Legion. Elune seems to be branding the Orcs as an important enemy of the Night Elves once again, with no right to their forests, straight up comparing their destructive actions to the Burning Legion. As she appears to be giving Tyrande a vision to direct her to a champion who can wipe them out or at least drive them out of the forests of Kalimdor, one wonders what she would think of Malfurion and the ancients, her son included, inviting them freely into the sacred summit of Hyjal. As a side note, I'm also very happy to see Tyrande act a lot more like the confident, strong, visionary leader of her people she was in Warcraft 3, rather than somewhat weaker, easily shaken person she was in her leader short story.
It seems rather obvious that the wolf-like Human champion leading the armies in Tyrande's vision refers to Varian. We've already heard in other lore sources that he seems to have the favor of Goldrinn, and his Horde nickname is Lo'Gosh, or "Ghost Wolf." This novel seems to be setting him up even more solidly as a hero and high commander of the Alliance forces. Interestingly enough, it looks like the prophecy suggests he'll be leading the armies of the Worgen against the Orcs, possibly to push them out of Ashenvale and/or Stonetalon. Hopefully, they'll do the same to the Forsaken in Gilneas in the near future.
The chapter names also reveal tidbits. There's chapters named after Jarod and Maiev Shadowsong, so there's hope we'll get some major action out of the siblings. Given that Maiev's wardens and Jarod Shadowsong himself were both neutral figures on Mount Hyjal, I'll be interested to see if they'll be bought back in the Alliance fold -- or at least the "get the Orcs out of our forests" fold -- or stay mostly on the outskirts as neutral figures. I'm hoping for the former, personally. Maiev's one of my favorite Night Elves, and I'd love to see her back defending her people now that Illidan has been properly bought to justice. She let Illidan's final words to get to her, but I think she still has a lot of purpose if she grabs onto it.
Another chapter is called "The Sword and the Axe," which hearkens back to the final battle in Tyrande's vision of the axe wielding Orc against the sword-wielding warrior. That suggests to me that we will see the battle in Tyrande's vision by the end of this book. The real question is ... who is the Orc Varian will fight? As much as I wish it was Garrosh, he wields only one axe, so it seems unlikely it's him. Perhaps it will simply be the Orcish Warlord who oversees the Ashenvale offensive, or whoever replaced Krom'gar.
Regardless, I have to say I'm pretty excited. There's a lot to look forward to if this first chapter is any indication. If the rest of the book builds off what we're seeing here, this book may very well live up to the hype as something that will help bring back the faction pride that the Alliance has been somewhat deprived of in the WoW era and provide some catharsis and victory in the long war against the Horde.
Click here for your free sample chapter and choose the Read First Chapter Free button below the picture of the book cover on the left side of the page. You'll be able to read the first chapter, as well as the chapter titles for the book (by pushing the back arrow on the pages). There are going to be a lot of spoilers in both the chapter names and the chapter itself, of course, so read at your own risk. For a quick (spoiler-filled) summary and a discussion of the possibilities, check after the break.
Chapter summary
The chapter starts with an Orcish expedition to Northrend. Apparently, Garrosh has ordered them to secure some sort of monster from Northrend to unleash on the Night Elves in Ashenvale. As the chapter opens, they are loading tarp-covered cages full of the monsters in question onto their ships. It's not clear what the monsters are. They seem to be to be huge, powerful, and angry, though, as one of them manages to grab two Orcs and crush them to death through the bars of its cage while they try to load it onto their ships. The Orcs only barely manage to pacify it by using sleeping powder of some sort. With the final cage loaded, they set sail back to Kalimdor.
The scene changes to the Night Elves' high priestess and leader, Tyrande Whisperwind, as she strolls through the temple gardens of Darnassus, meditating on the problems of the Cataclysm and the renewed Horde offensive. We learn that Tyrande, realizing that Malfurion won't be any long-term help in keeping the Alliance together, has called a summit to discuss the future of the Alliance. Unfortunately, many have not answered the summons yet, including Stormwind. As she thinks on all this, Elune sends her a vision.
She sees the War of the Ancients once again. The forces of the Burning Legion are pressing forward, ravaging the land. But there are no defenders, no Night Elves or their allies to stop them. Suddenly a mighty howl sounds, and Goldrinn, the wolf ancient, appears on the battlefield. But he is not alone, for a vast pack of wolves race forward with him. The wolves and Goldrinn fight the demons and appear to have the edge at first, but the demons quickly target Goldrinn and overwhelm him, killing him. As Goldrinn dies, a dark brown wolf leaps up, kills the demons who killed Goldrinn, and begins leading the wolf army in his stead.
The dark brown wolf rallies his companions, and they begin to push the legion back. But as Tyrande watches, the scene changes. The dark brown wolf turns into a Human man wielding a greatsword and clad in heavy armor. With him, the other wolves changed to Human forms as well. At the same time, the demons themselves shift and change into Orcs.
The vision ends with the Human warrior fighting an Orc dual-wielding axes. The Orc dies quickly to the Human's blade, and as he does, the rest of the Orcs die as well. The Human warrior stands triumphant with his comrades. The chapter ends as the warrior's face, at first shrouded, comes into view.

I'm rather amazed at how much this one chapter seems to suggest about the current lore and the direction of the Horde and Alliance in general. The identity of whatever monster the Orcs are transporting is up for a lot of speculation. It could, in theory, be some massive Scourge monsters, but I don't think Garrosh is that twisted. He has enough troubles with Sylvanas' blight as it is. Yeti or Magnataur seem to be the most likely options. They're both huge, and despite their semi-sentience, bad-tempered enough to attack anyone who's not one of them.
Of course, the other option is that they're Vrykul or even feral Worgen from Grizzly Hills. These would be an interesting way of attempting to sow discord or dismay in Alliance ranks, by trying to turn the other races against the Worgen in the latter case or by forcing Humans to fight their progenitors again in the former case. Still, the Night Elves have a pretty intimate knowledge of the Worgen curse by now, so feral Worgen might be dealt with too quickly. I'm still leaning toward Yeti or Magnataur.
Tyrande's vision brings up even more intriguing issues. Elune sent her a vision that directly compares the Orcs to the Burning Legion. Elune seems to be branding the Orcs as an important enemy of the Night Elves once again, with no right to their forests, straight up comparing their destructive actions to the Burning Legion. As she appears to be giving Tyrande a vision to direct her to a champion who can wipe them out or at least drive them out of the forests of Kalimdor, one wonders what she would think of Malfurion and the ancients, her son included, inviting them freely into the sacred summit of Hyjal. As a side note, I'm also very happy to see Tyrande act a lot more like the confident, strong, visionary leader of her people she was in Warcraft 3, rather than somewhat weaker, easily shaken person she was in her leader short story.
It seems rather obvious that the wolf-like Human champion leading the armies in Tyrande's vision refers to Varian. We've already heard in other lore sources that he seems to have the favor of Goldrinn, and his Horde nickname is Lo'Gosh, or "Ghost Wolf." This novel seems to be setting him up even more solidly as a hero and high commander of the Alliance forces. Interestingly enough, it looks like the prophecy suggests he'll be leading the armies of the Worgen against the Orcs, possibly to push them out of Ashenvale and/or Stonetalon. Hopefully, they'll do the same to the Forsaken in Gilneas in the near future.
The chapter names also reveal tidbits. There's chapters named after Jarod and Maiev Shadowsong, so there's hope we'll get some major action out of the siblings. Given that Maiev's wardens and Jarod Shadowsong himself were both neutral figures on Mount Hyjal, I'll be interested to see if they'll be bought back in the Alliance fold -- or at least the "get the Orcs out of our forests" fold -- or stay mostly on the outskirts as neutral figures. I'm hoping for the former, personally. Maiev's one of my favorite Night Elves, and I'd love to see her back defending her people now that Illidan has been properly bought to justice. She let Illidan's final words to get to her, but I think she still has a lot of purpose if she grabs onto it.
Another chapter is called "The Sword and the Axe," which hearkens back to the final battle in Tyrande's vision of the axe wielding Orc against the sword-wielding warrior. That suggests to me that we will see the battle in Tyrande's vision by the end of this book. The real question is ... who is the Orc Varian will fight? As much as I wish it was Garrosh, he wields only one axe, so it seems unlikely it's him. Perhaps it will simply be the Orcish Warlord who oversees the Ashenvale offensive, or whoever replaced Krom'gar.
Regardless, I have to say I'm pretty excited. There's a lot to look forward to if this first chapter is any indication. If the rest of the book builds off what we're seeing here, this book may very well live up to the hype as something that will help bring back the faction pride that the Alliance has been somewhat deprived of in the WoW era and provide some catharsis and victory in the long war against the Horde.
Filed under: News items, Lore, Worgen
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Reader Comments (Page 3 of 5)
Marius W. Sep 6th 2011 10:00AM
Going to say it again, this just adds more credibility to part of 4.3 being Gilneas related and Gilneas being made into a playable zone far past the initial few levels it is now.
Forsaken outside ready to attack an empty zone was clue #1 that there was more going on inside than just the initial quests.
No one would leave a zone empty when it had so much lore surrounding it.
I will say this again too; Vanilla wow revamp screwed us out of a lot of Cata content and why 4.3 is going to be huge, as said by Blizzard. Its going to add in a lot that should have been there at the start but wasn't due to the overwhelming work it took to revamp everything in the old world. They ran out of time so they released a partially done xpac. The revamp of the old world isn't cata.. its vanilla updated as why everyone gets it with Vanilla wow, even if they dont buy any xpac at all. I say this as there is some confusion and debate as to what Cata actually included as part of the actual xpac.
Ikatsu Sep 6th 2011 10:23AM
There are a lot of things that will be added on the future from my pov, like Gilneas story and silithus (yes, silithus is so empty they have a portal to get you out of there and aq is a zone now, makes sense!)
Gilneas was retaken by the alliance during the forsaken questlines and now I hope we see more of it, it's an awesome zone.
othragon Sep 6th 2011 10:57AM
I'm hoping they don't rehash AQ, the empty zone you speak of is nothing but the raid instance, available to fly over same as you can now fly over ZG.
As for Cataclysm not being complete, well they did deliver 5 new zones, 4 raids, a ton of instances, three Battlegrounds if you count TB, plus, the revamped world. Doesn't sound like it's few content but if compared to the other xpacks it might be slightly less then what we're used to at the start. I for once still think it's an awesome expansion!
Ikatsu Sep 6th 2011 12:06PM
Nah, I don't think it's few content, I'm just saying that silithus was for some reason totally left out of the revamp, zul'gurub was empty like aq but then it became a dungeon with new storyline on 4.1, remember?
I still think they'll add some story to that place later, as they will probably do with Gilneas.
After all, Genn said they'd come back...
Marius W. Sep 6th 2011 4:50PM
Ikatsu.
ZG... you can fly over and go into a very empty ZG unless you port in. Same with ZF over in tanaris and lost city of tolvir. They are all there and empty so you can fly over and even land in it. That doesn't mean you are in the instance. You are just in the space that the instance holds in the world.
When we can fly in Ghostlands, you will also see a very empty ZA unless you go through the instance portal.
Silithus won't be revamped. Its not empty. Its filled with quests and there was no reason for them to revamp it was added long after Vanilla was released and they seem happy with it. We can fly in it so there is your revamp for it.
Oth.. I think you are missing the bigger picture here. There is a lot that is left unfinished and one of the most obvious things is a very npc empty Gilneas. Its a ghost town, yet the forsaken are right outside preparing for war.... war for a completely empty zone??
That makes sense to you?? They can just walk in and it is there for the taking.
Also compare Cata to BC and Wrath when they were released. A lot more zones and a lot more content to level through. Cata has only 5 levels of very quick leveling and 5 zones that everyone got through very quickly.
Great we get dungeons and raids and those 5 zones. I didn't say they didn't give us anything. It just felt very unfinished to a lot of people. Its a pretty common opinion of Cata, especially for those who have been around since Vanilla and BC.
Blizz also said the LARGEST EVER patch will be 4.3. So what does that mean to you? A gigantic deathwing raid? A raid as big as azeroth itself?? No. It means a lot of content aside from the final raid, mogging, and darkmoon faire. If it was just that, well the patch would be kinda small and not really living up to the promise we got from Blizzard.
Comprende??
Grovinofdarkhour Sep 6th 2011 10:14AM
You mean, Tyrande... does... something??
Nina Katarina Sep 6th 2011 10:44AM
Bah, never happen.
Next you'll be saying that Bob in Silvermoon will be mentioned somewhere in the game.
Camero Sep 6th 2011 10:42AM
Just to those in the UK (And I am in the UK, so this at least worked for me) when it said it was unavailable in the UK it meant for purchase. I was able to click 'Continue Reading Sample' to be able to read the first chapter.
And whilst I like that Knaak appears to have moved away from his old 'damsel Tyrande' image, I still don't really like the way he writes. Elune is a deity who will appear in battle to calm both sides. She's not an active encourager of warfare, she just allows it if it is the only way to obtain peace (not necessarily true, but that's how I like to interpret it).
Japith Sep 6th 2011 10:49AM
Inside the cages? Have you SEEN the first 10 minutes of Jurassic Park? This is a Knaak novel, after all, so it must be super intelligent northrend raptors.
The Orc in the fedora probably screemed, "Shoot her!"
Rocheku Sep 6th 2011 11:18AM
You, good sir, just made my day
Jason Sep 6th 2011 3:10PM
Interesting tid-bit, one of the winning costumes at Dragon*Con this last weekend was a pair dressed up as that guy and a really well articulated raptor costume.
#clevergirl
Amaxe Sep 6th 2011 10:49AM
Knaack's writing isn't as bad as I was led to believe from previous WoW Insider comments. I think there are worse WoW writers out there (DiCandido comes to mind here with his wretched "Cycle of Hatred.")
Brendan Sep 6th 2011 11:00AM
Just so you know, the cropped pic used on the facebook link looks like porn. Not even being a troll, go look.
Nikkiezorz Sep 6th 2011 11:35AM
Oh I wholeheartedly agree! I was exceedingly worried about what I would see when I clicked the link. I very nearly blocked it until i realized it was a wow insider link... bad crop is bad.
Anyways, I'm excited for this story despite my hatred of varian, I've always thought of him as a conceited, racist jackass, who should NOT be the leader of the alliance in any way shape or form. (Vote Anduin 2012!) Perhaps this story will give me a different perspective on him. perhaps not we'll see.
Luotian Sep 6th 2011 12:44PM
@Nikkiezorz: Go read about Henry VI. Then think of Anduin. Then tell me again how Anduin would make a good king.
beqaxitiri Sep 6th 2011 1:40PM
Henry VI? so, are you comparing Varian to Henry V? or otherwise I'm kind of missing the point :D
But in case you compared Varian to Henry V, that comparison is extremely inaccurate - Sure, both were warrior kings, with passionate hatred towards their opponents, but there was one huge difference - Henry didn't have an external, much bigger threat aiming to destroy all of humanity to look for, There was no burning legion invading England, as well as the Earth itself didn't house an unknown amount of gods of chaos :) so Henry didn't need if not an alliance, at least, a peace with France and that was not an issue, he was free to war :)
Plus, Henry was a lot more successful both as a king and as a military leader :) I mean, where's Varian's Agincourt? :)
andrewjo59 Sep 6th 2011 6:16PM
@Beqaxitiri
I believe he was comparing Henry VI to Anduin, not Varian to Henry V.
Dankie Sep 6th 2011 11:11AM
I want to know what a 'ready weapon' is.
Seriously, does this guy have an editor?
"The guards stood alongside the ramp, torches in one hand, ready weapons in the other."
-_-;; I'm facepalming on the first page. Hell, the opening line is right from a dime store romance novel.
zweitblom Sep 6th 2011 12:03PM
http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/ready
5. proceeding from or showing such quickness: a ready reply.
Your problem being...?
Luotian Sep 6th 2011 12:41PM
The problem being the word order. Almost always it is "at the ready" not "ready weapons". Because that makes it sound like its the type of weapons. And while technically not *wrong* it IS awkward and clunky and would do better with just a tiny bit of rewording. Kind of like people who never use contractions. It isn't wrong, but it is jarring and awkward.