Dragon Venom (Obsidian Chronicles Series #3) by Lawrence Watt-Evans

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  • Pub. Date: September 2003
  • 480pp
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    Product Details

    • Pub. Date: September 2003
    • Publisher: Doherty, Tom Associates, LLC
    • Format: Hardcover, 480pp

    Synopsis

    After many years of peace in the Lands of Men, there came Dragon Weather: a wave of incredible heat, oppressive humidity, dark angry clouds . . . and dragons. Dragons with no remorse, no sympathy, no use for humans; dragons who destroyed an entire village and everyone in it. Everyone, that is, except the young boy Arlian. Orphaned and alone, Arlian was captured by looters and sold as a mining slave. He finally escaped, fueled by years of hatred and a personal vow to bring justice to all who had wronged him.

    After killing those who enslaved him, Arlian sought out The Dragon Society, whose sworn purpose was to stand against the dragon menace. It was there, among his peers, that Arlian discovered he is humanity's best hope for defeating the dragons . . . permanently.

    Now, Arlian seeks his final vengeance: death to all of dragonkind. But as he begins to destroy the evil beasts, wild magic seeps into the Lands of Men, sowing chaos and destruction in its wake. Will Arlian's all-consuming quest for justice consume humanity as well? The answer may lie within his ancient foe's most lethal weapon: Dragon Venom

    Publishers Weekly

    In Watt-Evans's stirring conclusion to his high fantasy Obsidian Chronicles (after Dragon Weather and The Dragon Society), the series' rather remote and self-righteous protagonist, Arlian, returns to the walled city of Manfort after 14 years of slaying evil dragons to find the duke of Manfort contending with unruly subjects and disruptions caused by wild magic. Since the duke blames these problems on dragon slaying, Arlian suffers near disgrace and has to defend his work from criticism, not that the duke's displeasure bothers our thick-skinned hero much. No longer allowed to kill dragons, Arlian decides to nose out why the wild magic has spilled into the Lands of Man and stumbles on a more intriguing line of study-dragon venom. Why, and how, does dragon venom turn humans into dragonhearts, and what connection is there between humans, dragons and the long-lost Gods of Man? Watt-Evans tends to overexplain and his dragons lack any redeeming graces, but the swashbuckling story line builds to a twist ending sure to leave the author's fans smiling.

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    Biography

    Born and raised in Massachusetts, Lawrence Watt-Evans has been a full-time writer and editor for more than twenty years. The author of more than thirty novels, over one hundred short stories, and more than one hundred and fifty published articles, Watt-Evans writes primarily in the fields of science fiction, fantasy, horror, and comic books. His short fiction has won the Hugo Award as well as twice winning the Asimov's Readers Award. His fiction has been published in England, Germany, Italy, Japan, Spain, Poland, France, Hungary, and Russia
    He served as president of the Horror Writers Association from 1994 to 1996 and after leaving that office was the recipient of HWA's first service award ever. He is also a member of Novelists Inc., and the Science Fiction Writers of America. Married with two children, he and his wife Julie live in Maryland.

    Customer Reviews

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    • Ratings: 3Reviews: 2

    Dragon Venom (Obsidian Chronicles Series #3)by Anonymous

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    February 25, 2006: The Obsidian Chronicles is one of the most exciting series I have ever read. It has incredibly unique characters, such as Tirikindaro, and a storyline that keeps you glued to the pages. The ending isn't as conclusive as one would expect, but it is for the better as it leaves room for the reader's imagination without leaving the story hanging. The book does not contain much comic relief, but the story flows so smoothly that you don't notice.

    Dragon Venom (Obsidian Chronicles Series #3)by Anonymous

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    April 09, 2004: this series is so refreshing in that it doesn't have hundreds of characters stringing along a plot that gets convoluted and confusing. Instead we have here story that is clearly focused upon one main character who, in my opinion, is clearly one of the most unique and fascinating individuals of any series i've read, and i've read all the major ones and many others. One doesn't have to reread previous books to remember what goes on, yet also, the tale written here is complicated in a way that is wholly its own style. anyone into fantasy should read these books, they are NOT in the style of tolkien, jordan, goodkind, martin, or eddings; who are good writers in their own way, but the obsidian chronicles prove that a major epic CAN center on one or two main characters, and not a large cast of them.