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 4 of 5)
Amaxe Sep 6th 2011 12:46PM
"readied" would be better than ready, but it isn't a real problem for me.
Luotian Sep 6th 2011 11:30AM
But its *Knaak*. And I feel like I can say that now because I've been slogging my way through the War of the Ancients novels for my writing contest entry. And OMG I can't stand it. I really can't because the writing is so terrible. His sentences are convoluted and his descriptions describe nothing. Its about as solid as Stephanie Meyer, who is a woman I would stone if I could.
Which disappoints me so much, because I LOVE Varian and Garrosh, and find them the most interesting characters in WoW. I want to enjoy this book so badly, but unless his style has changed drastically I'm doomed.
snarkygoldfish Sep 6th 2011 11:33AM
What's the 'orb' count on the first chapter?
Sgrae Sep 6th 2011 12:58PM
I know Garrosh has Gorehowl now; but he did dual-wield axes in the Ulduar trailer....
agamedes Sep 6th 2011 1:40PM
I have an idea - what if it's not Elune granting Tyrande this visoin? :) I mean, it certainly doesn't seem like anything the goddess would do, she's never shown any particular hatred towards orcs previously, why would she encourage antagonizing them in such a manner?
What if it's an old god? :D Deathwing will soon be dead, so they need a new champion - and who's better than Varian? has a kingdom, devoted followers, and is so filled with hatred, he'll be easy to corrupt :)
Suzaku Sep 6th 2011 3:10PM
I've recently devised a tinfoil hat theory that one of the two moons is an artificial titan satellite which now houses an old god. That same old god lured a certain tribe of dark trolls to settle on the shores of a strange lake, and next thing you know, they were summoning evil creatures into the world and plunging it into chaos.
kane1701 Sep 6th 2011 1:16PM
I love Varian Wrynn. He is the man. And I have been waiting for this since it was first mentioned. Very excited.
And people can say what they want about Knaak but as it looks from where Im sitting he has been backed many times by Blizz and has several books in print; meanwhile to my knowledge no one who post(s) on this site has any claim to author-ship. Someone must like his stuff. Oh well...haters gonna hate.
Its also nice to see Varian get the attention he deserves, He's going to proven to be the unquestioned leader of the Alliance and the mortal embodiment of Goldrinn. This rocks. And as far as the Orcs and their wolf connections...they are connected to the wolves from THEIR world. Goldrinn is from/of Azeroth. Ya know, the place the orcs have been trying to burn for the better part of 30yrs (in game time). Why would the Wolf Spirit feel anything but the same way Varian does when it comes to orcs? Just a thought. But like I said Haters gonna hate.
Mommacow Sep 6th 2011 1:42PM
I'm old-school, have hated Knaak since he was doing bad Knaak-offs (sorry) of Christopher Stasheff's books back in the 1980s. I don't have to be a published author to know when a book is bad, any more than I have to be a professional chef to know when food tastes godawful.
kane1701 Sep 6th 2011 1:48PM
just like in food, its your palate. All im saying in that this guy has made a fairly successful career for himself writing. Someone HAS to like his material. In this case its Blizz. You may not like it, but there seems to be enough who do. He does keep getting work after all.
Suzaku Sep 6th 2011 3:20PM
"Its also nice to see Varian get the attention he deserves"
An entire comic book starring TWO of him wasn't enough? He also had a fairly major role in The Shattering, as part of the Anduin in Ironforge storyline.
As for "someone must like his stuff" -- yes, someone does. Metzen. Metzen, unfortunately, does not have great taste in books. He's a huge fan of crappy Dragonlance books, which is what Knaak was primarily known for before he started writing for Blizzard.
That's why Knaaks books are usually full of dragons and have very little to do with primary Warcraft lore or characters. When they do deal with actual with those things, Knaak usually invents new characters or has his dragons assume humanoid form in order to act as the lead characters themselves.
Also, he's written a lot of books, but he's not that successful of an author. At least Christie Golden has managed to land a couple of her WoW books on the NY Times Bestsellers list. Knaak's books have only ever had mediocre receptions.
kane1701 Sep 6th 2011 3:32PM
I bet you have a horde toon as your main, dont you?
But if you dont like Knaak then dont buy the book, its that simple. and you say its crappy dragonlance books (i may or may not agree, that isnt the issue at hand) but he does have some name recognition and you said it, Metzen likes him. And Metzen, for better or worse can tell a story himself. So unless the book is completely rejected by the WoW playerbase, (it wont be) Knaak will most likely have more Blizz writing coming. And face it, Varian is the man.
as i said earlier, Haters gonna hate.
Xantenise Sep 6th 2011 5:47PM
"And people can say what they want about Knaak but as it looks from where Im sitting he has[...] several books in print; "
Like Stephenie Meyer?
Suzaku Sep 6th 2011 8:58PM
Varian was a huge disappointment to me, actually.
The WoW comic had a promising start but turned to crap pretty quick, and honestly, it didn't really recover until the last volume with Med'an, after they switched to a much, much better artist.
Varian was extremely generic in it, and I hated the whole "you are actually split into two guys! here's a magic sword for each of you! oh, you fusion danced back together and the swords combined too!" storyline. Plus, he literally decapitated something every four pages or so. There was no challenge for him, that's a boring story. He never really had any difficulty.
I really was disappointed. That first Jim Lee cover honestly hyped me up. A human king with amnesia all decked out in orcish armor and warpaint. Metzen hyped it up like he'd be spending time in Orgrimmar and getting intrenched in the Horde side of the war. THAT was interesting. But, nope, after two issues as a gladiator, mostly spent at Dire Maul, the tauren take him to the pools of vision to recover his memory and then let him go.
kane1701 Sep 7th 2011 3:02AM
@ Suzaku
dude, just admit you are biased about this story. you dont like it because its main character is an alliance leader who is going to whip orc a$$. thats your main problem with it.
if the horde wasnt so determined to create war with the Alliance then they could have some supplies back in poor little burned Orgrimmar. So there goes that... I say let them starve. its better than they deserve anyway. screw them.
"That first Jim Lee cover honestly hyped me up"
...you were upset because the story wasnt about a human leader who sided with the whored. QQ man...
"The WoW comic had a promising start but turned to crap pretty quick" ... did it ever dawn on you that Varian was a MAJOR player in WoW?? Thats why his was such a huge focal point in Alliance questing up to Cata. He is the man. Get over your Alliance hatred. The humans belong here on Azeroth....the orcs do NOT.
haters hatin again....
Suzaku Sep 7th 2011 8:59AM
Actually, I never expected Wrynn to "join the Horde", the way Metzen described it, he was going to get a close look and understanding of Horde inner workings and become an even greater threat to them as a result. That did not happen, at all. Like I said, he was barely even a gladiator.
And Wrynn was hardly a "major focal point" in ANY questing prior to Cataclysm. He was completely missing in action up until Wrath of the Lich King was released. Yes, he was the subject of the Missing Diplomat questline, which never even ended up ending abruptly without any real resolution until the comic was released.
Did you read the comic? I bought it. Every issue, even though it wasn't very good. I even wrote the majority of the summary that recaps Varian's comic story on Wowpedia. I've read most of the novels too, except for War of the Ancients which I haven't been able to fully sit through.
The comic had generally poor art and mediocre writing. The art especially got bad during the second and third volumes, after Ludo went to work on Ashbringer, and it didn't improve until issue 20, when Pop Mhan and Mike Bowden came on board. Ludo's pencils are good, but the inking and coloring for the first seven issues was poor.
I assume you haven't read it, because you probably wouldn't be so quick to defend it, unless you're a fan of campy, poorly written comics.
http://i51.tinypic.com/20pspi1.jpg
I mean, look at that. It's lame, and it's hackneyed stuff like that which led to me disliking Varian.
Cathon Sep 6th 2011 2:07PM
I'm glad that Varian is at least getting some attention in this book, since he was given very little time at all in Cataclysm itself (and that was mostly just to get you to interact with Anduin). I don't think comparing the Horde to the Burning Legion is biased at all. In fact, I think the Horde is MORE evil now than when they were under the Blood curse. In the latter situation, they were more like wild animals, just lashing out at whatever was nearby.
Now it seems like they are going out of their way to do evil things, like the Broken Front incident, turning humans to goo in Gilneas and Southsore, and the bombing of the druid school in Stonetalon.
Here's hoping for this book (or even the next expansion) they'll take the kid gloves off the Alliance for some sweet retaliation :)
Suzaku Sep 6th 2011 3:36PM
Southshore and Gilneas wasn't even the orcs. And the orcs ordered Sylvanas to stop using the Blight, but she's continued to use it secretly.
The orc responsible Stonetalon also killed tauren, and was personally executed by Garrosh for his warcrimes.
There's no doubt that the orcs were more evil when they were led by the likes of Gul'dan, slaughtering and pillaging and even completely destroying Stormwind.
More importantly, something a lot of Alliance players seem to neglect is that the orcs desperately need resources, and the night elves abandonned the agreements that allowed the orcs to trade for lumber.
Orgrimmar was pretty much completely burned in The Shattering. The orcs of durotar are suffering from drought and are actually *starving*. From Garrosh's point of view, he simply won't allow his people to suffer like that when there's ample resources to the north in Ashenvale and to the south in Dustwallow.
Telwar Sep 6th 2011 5:51PM
If Thrall and Garrosh wanted to trade with the night elves, perhaps they shouldn't have sanctioned a suicidal sneak attack on the Alliance forces fighting the Scourge at the Broken Front.
And maybe they should have kept a better eye on the Forsaken.
Fletcher Sep 6th 2011 7:14PM
If the orcs wanted peace, they'd have sat on Garrosh when he said "all Kalimdor belongs to the Horde". Go through Ashenvale and Stonetalon - either side - and you'll have characters telling you he's said that.
No compromise with the enemy - Kalimdor belongs to the Kaldorei!
Jason Sep 6th 2011 2:14PM
What if.....
Varian is a Werewolf! DUN DUN DUN