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The Mark of Nerath

A Dungeons & Dragons Novel

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The Mark of Nerath

By: Bill Slavicsek
Narrated by: Dolph Amick
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It is a time of magic and monsters, a time when only a few scattered points of light glow with stubborn determination amid a rising tide of shadows. It is a time when only the bravest heroes dare tread the wild of the unknown....

About a century ago, the collapse of Nerath, the last empire of the world, ushered in a dark age that continues to this day, the peace and prosperity of the past seemingly lost forever. However, even those fabled days weren’t without a few blemishes. One of these was Emperor Magroth the First, a tyrant and a conqueror; cruel, ambitious, filled with delusions of grandeur and dreams of destiny, and more than a bit insane. During Magroth’s reign, rumors of necromancy and demon worship were rampant, but the truth was far worse. Thanks to deals he made, pacts he agreed to, and rituals he performed, death was not the end Emperor Magroth. Instead, a piece of him was drawn into the Shadowfell where he became the ruler of a domain of dead. From this vantage, the old king prepared for his return - and the new empire he would forge from the ruins of old.

Now Magroth has made a new deal with Orcus, the Demon Prince of Undeath, that frees him from his eternal prison for a year and a day. In that time, Magroth must re-establish his ancient kingdom while also accomplishing a series of terrible tasks for Orcus. To this end, Magroth’s plans intersect with two other threats that are rising in the world. Where these threats meet, the world shudders. And it falls to our heroes to keep the fragile lights of civilization burning for another day.

©2010 Wizards of the Coast LLC (P)2013 Audible, Inc.
Action & Adventure Dragons & Mythical Creatures Epic Epic Fantasy Fantasy Fiction Royalty Mythology Magic
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Story: a lovely and not to hard to understand plot of prophecies and dark rituals. This isn’t the Wheel of Time, this is an action packed adventure that doesn’t take itself too seriously.
There it’s lots of material and scenes that a dungeon master could be adult get inspired by and base their own dnd campaign on. Thats one of the beauties of d&d novels!
Unfortunately, if you were hoping for information about the Nerath empire so you could use it in your own Nentir Vale based campaign you’re going to be disappointed. Almost nothing is shown about it throughout the book. However, the end reveals a fantastic reason for its downfall which I’m sure players would love finding out!

Performance: The main villain Mograth is the one character I loved hearing the most. There are lines that make him almost comical. A lich emperor, returned to free himself from his demiplane of dread, who drops funny one-liners! Dolph does a great job voicing him.
He puts effort into all of his voices!
Sadly, whatever accent the priestess of Orcus was meant to have was pretty funny, and he absolutely cannot do the southern English accent he’s trying to give the character Falon(can’t spell it because it was an audiobook), falling into the usual traps Americans fall into when trying to pull that one off though.
A for effort though!

Guys, give this one a read. The story is fast paced, easy to follow, and a great source of scenes and scenarios you could easily incorporate into your own dnd game, maybe even a villainous campaign because Caliban and Mograth have a great adventure of their own!

Inspiring dungeons and dragons story.

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This is the first D and D audiobook I have tried, and I really wanted to like it. I've been reading fantasy for years, and like the setting. I'm also a fan of the game on which this book is based. My overwhelming impression of this audiobook is that the narrator was not well chosen. The voices are both under and over-done, with one of the main characters sounding like something out of Monty Python. In all the years I've been listening to books through Audible, I have rarely found listening to anything to be a chore, but this certainly was. If I were to read the paper version of this book, it would be fine, but the narration killed it for me. Hate to be critical, but being honest, I've looked up other work by the same narrator, so that I can avoid it. I'm not paying for anything else by him.

Let down by narration

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