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The Vulture Lord

Warhammer Age of Sigmar

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The Vulture Lord

By: Richard Strachan
Narrated by: Richard Reed
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Summary

A Zothar Athrabis novel.

Zothar is an Ossiarch Bonereaper who rules over a city in Shyish. He struck a bargain with Nagash to preserve the soul of his dead son, choosing a new host from the victor of the Games—a festival that takes place once each decade. When Zothar breaks tradition and raises Lycus, the current champion, as his own son, his actions incite a bloody rebellion amongst the citizens.

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It’s a fascinating look at what passes for normal life in the realm of Shyish, where the living and the dead walk side by side, and everyday existence is filled with danger, adventure, and no shortage of bizarre and mystical creatures.

The Story:

In a forgotten corner of Shyish, the city of Lament prepares for the most important festival in its calendar, the Games—a series of events that will seal the fate of their victor.

Following the tragic death of his son many centuries ago, the cruel Vulture Lord, King Zothar Athrabis, made a terrible bargain with Nagash to preserve his child’s soul. Now, once every 10 years, the new champion of the Games must become host to the boy’s tormented spirit, while the old vessel is condemned to death. Most citizens of Lament deem this a great honour, but when the city’s newly crowned champion, Lycus, is taken by the king to raise as his own, his family question their sacrifice.

As the years pass and a new decade looms ever closer—and with it Lycus’ grisly fate—the Prince of Athrabis is caught between his duty to his new father and the prospect of escaping death to return to his old life. As fierce, bloody rebellion ensues, and Lycus is exposed to violent truths, he must decide once and for all where his loyalties lie.

Written by Richard Strachan. Narrated by Richard Reed. Running time 9 hours 46 mins (approx).

©2022 Games Workshop Limited (P)2022 Games Workshop Limited
Action & Adventure Dragons & Mythical Creatures Epic Epic Fantasy Fantasy Fiction Military Royalty Mythology Destiny
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I'm trying to get into the AoS lore and this really fleshes out the world and makes the realm of Shyish feel like a real place.

Favourite AoS book so far

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A utopia lives in eternal peace protected by immortal skeletal guardians, the only price is the tithe of their dead.
Not their living being killed, just the bodies of those that aleady died.
And once every ten years he takes a single child, the best child who wins the competition that everyone knows the winner is taken from.
And they complain, bicker and whine for an entire book about how horrible that is, what awful slavery they are put under and what a oppressor their eternal protector is and how Sigmar would probably do a better job.
They are wrong, everyone (in the book and the readers) who know anything about the outside world knows that they are wrong.
And insted of being convinced by those who have visited the outside they just keep whining like the spoiled children they are.
It hurt to listen to.

Ungrateful children bicker

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Honestly, a good book. Just not what I was expecting.

This is very much a human focused novel, centered around a city in the realm of Shyish. Going into it I expected a much greater deep dive into the OBR society, culture, mindset but that wasn’t really present to the extent I would have liked. The OBR felt very stale, one-dimensional and lacking in “flavour” which perhaps might have been intentional.

The human cast was much better. I particularly like how the relationship between the main character and his mother developed and changed throughout the novel. I even got emotional at one point. But still a couple of them felt relatively weak characters.
Narrators performance is great, giving the characters a lot more “life” (no pun intended) than just the writing itself.

Overall a well–written, human focused story set within Shyish. The reason for the lowish score is that I would have preferred a lot more of an exploration of the OBR rather than this human story. 5.5 /10

All reviews for my own record - 5.5/10

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The ossiarch characters are great and the main human protagonist is an interesting character with his unique role. Unfortunately for the rest of the human characters I struggled to like them and by the end of the book I ended up disliking most of them. I’d actually reached a point where I wanted to skip there perspectives. The book falls short of being perfect due to some dislikable characters which ruin the overall impact of some of the later story beats. An honest 3.5-4 out of 5.

A Great age of sigmar starch bone reapers story

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Was expecting a lot more from the Bonereapers perspective but was sadly dissapointed.

The story was ok but much more.
Narrator on the other hand was great.

Not so much Bonereapers

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