Book Review: Curse of Strahd

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Curse of Strahd (Dungeons & Dragons, 5th Edition) by Wizards RPG Team

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Unravel the mysteries of Ravenloft® in this dread adventure for the world’s greatest roleplaying game
 
Under raging storm clouds, the vampire Count Strahd von Zarovich stands silhouetted against the ancient walls of Castle Ravenloft. Rumbling thunder pounds the castle spires. The wind’s howling increases as he turns his gaze down toward the village of Barovia. Far below, yet not beyond his keen eyesight, a party of adventurers has just entered his domain. Strahd’s face forms the barest hint of a smile as his dark plan unfolds. He knew they were coming, and he knows why they came — all according to his plan. A lightning flash rips through the darkness, but Strahd is gone. Only the howling of the wind fills the midnight air. The master of Castle Ravenloft is having guests for dinner. And you are invited.

 

MY REVIEW

A group of my friends after one hangout session decided they wanted to play the Ravenloft. While we were all gamers (and women), none of us gamed together in any combination, and I haven’t gamed for real-real in about a decade. I don’t even know where my dice are. They tossed the Curse of Strahd at me and volun-told me I was the DM (I’ve DM on and off since I first started playing, more “on” than “off” when I am at a table).

So now I got (1) learn the fifth edition, (2) remember how to DM, (3) meld a new gaming group, and (4) rediscover Ravenloft in its new format (which I previously only played as a character).

Fifth edition and Curse of Strahd is making this herculean task possible. I wouldn’t want to do this module as a new DM, but as one with experience in storytelling as well as dungeon-mastering (is that a word?), it is exceptionally well set-up. The chapters are easy to follow, all the dungeons are mapped well, the monsters and their reasons for being where they are are logical, etc. You do need the Player’s Handbook and Monster Manual and Dungeon Master’s Guide to play the module – but using the core books should be expected.

With the new party, I decided to do the optional appendix for game play 1-3 level of experience as well as the “draw them to Ravenloft” portion in the introduction. These add-ons work as good as the rest of the book.

There are some “holes” in the book, deliberately left for the DM to fill in. For example, the third gem from the Wizards of Wine which disappeared a decade ago has no further backstory than it is gone. I’ve decided to use that “sandbox” area the Ravenloft creators left for DMs, to make part of the module my own. It’s awesome they left an area to individualize the game to the DM’s interests, giving them room to tell their own story and be more invested in Curse of Strahd. So much more fun for me.

The instructions say read the book through before DMing it. YES! DO THIS! So many of the sections interact with each other getting the general lay of the land will make the game much, much better for players and the DM.

Ravenloft is one of the first, the first? – yeah, the first, storytelling-oriented module (instead of dungeon crawl-dice roll) and the company brought back the original writers to expand the module out for fifth edition. Everything remains true to the original, but works with the new 5th edition rules.

Vampire the Masquerade story-telling-centric style would likely not exist without Ravenloft.

Curse of Strahd captures the heart of Ravenloft and carries its legacy well.

Flash: Time to Move On

Image courtesy of Geerati at FreeDigitalPhotos.net

Bartholomew shook out his newspaper to get the pages aligned for folding, then proceeded to fold it together, slipped the world political section, part B of the Sunday paper, into place and folded the whole assembly in half again. Due to rising cost and slipping readership, he could easily do so where even a single decade ago the weekend paper for the city ran more than two inches. “Karyn, I do believe it is time to move on.”

“Sire?” his manservant, a woman given this day and age, and surprisingly competent for one who never finished formal schooling, inquired.

He smiled, just a hint of teeth, any wider and Karyn usually flinched. While she was willing to work for a vampire to keep roof overhead and food on-table for herself and her three children, she was more aware than most humans he had employed that civilized did not mean tamed. Bartholomew wasn’t feral, but only in as much as he wished to be. Civilization kept hunger at bay better than anarchy.

“I had hoped the unrest would past,” he tapped the paper on his magazine table beside his favorite chair, “but your leadership is just, as the saying goes, pouring gasoline on the fire. One does not fire on civilians and expect them to go away. Not with the barely lethal ammunition they’ve been using and, certainly, not after years of growing disparity in wealth.”

“You’ve seen this all before?” she said more than asked, picking up the newspaper and evening glass for disposal.

He uncurled his right hand and touched the left index finger to the right fingers, starting with the thumb and continuing to the pinky and switching hand before stopping midway. “More times than I care to count. And given that, I think I have learned when it is a good time to leave. America is going to be unhealthy to live in when the Great Experiment fails.” Bart stood, straightening his jacket lines and tugging the sleeves into place.

***

After three years in his employ, Karyn stood to one side of the door, not leaving until completely dismissed. Something about the vampire indicated he wasn’t done yet. While he didn’t need much in the way of companionship, a bit was required for sanity, or so he had informed her during her first month performance review. She hadn’t realized that termination after the probationary period would be more literal than any other of the make-do jobs she had taken since dropping out her freshman year pregnant. Fortunately he liked her; unfortunately he informed her of his true nature so leaving became impossible. On the third hand, he paid three times anything she made previously, as well as provided an entire wing of his small mansion as living quarters free of charge.

She wondering if moving on meant cleaning up things, things like her. Karyn watched the vampire’s nostrils flare as her fear spiked though she was careful not to move. Desperate as only the lion keeper can be when in the lion’s cage and the door locks behind them, the twenty-six year old searched for a question to remind the vampire he preferred her as a living person and not food, “Great Experiment?”

“Democracy, or more accurate, a federated representative democracy. It’s been surprisingly effective these last two hundred years, but I think the next little bit will be every bit as uncomfortable as the civil war in some locations.” He nodded at the newspaper. “And between the little in-house political coup counting between done between the Mayor and Governor, the out-and-out war between the legislature and the courts, and whatever that petty fool of a reality-show president, and whoever is behind him, this city will be one of the hot spots. Pity, I really like her cobblestone, greenways, and statues. I hope the deliberations don’t destroy too many of them.”

He left the study and waved her to pass him and proceed to the kitchen, following behind her, making the hairs on her neck stand on end. Once in the kitchen, she dropped his archaic newspaper into the recycle bin and moved to wash the crusting droplets out of the glass while he lifted a neon yellow notesheet from a stack he kept there, pulled out a pen, and sat-leaned against a stool on the counter.

“Boat would be best, with the plague going on. If a port delays entry, I can wait it out with proper arrangements.” Bartholomew started writing in a scribble better suited for a quill pen rather than the hundred-dollar, can-write-in-space ball point device he was using. “The Blue Sound can hold another twenty adults after the crew and your family.” He pulled a second sheet out of the acrylic container, this one hot pink. He stopped a moment, pen touching paper. “That is, if you wish to go.”

Karyn put the lone glass into the drying rack, same as every night, not daring to turn around and face him. “My children … will they …”

“Our agreement stands even during travel.”

She sagged against the sink. As he pointed out, when one lives forever money and property has less value than one’s word. Her children weren’t food and were safe, and as long as she kept the secret from them, not required to stay in this dark supernatural corner to the world when they became of age. She traced the veins in the marble surface, considering. Jack turned eleven just last month. His growing curiosity and the secrets the boat will hold.

Or stay.

“How bad do you think it will get?” she asked, still not facing him.

The pen clicked when set down on the kitchen island behind her.

“I’ve enjoyed the lively energy that is America, but their version of chaos is fairly unique so my best guess is more speculation. I expect Sarajevo level disruptions in some major cities such as we are in, especially the port cities.” The chair creaked. “The biggest issue is which way the despot-to-be in the White House is going to fall. I don’t know if the bright mages, the dark wizards, one of the lycanthrope clans, or one of the other supernaturals have their claws in him, or if he is this damaged all on his own. It’s not a vampire coven, no style.”

“There…there…are others.” Karyn spun, her blond bobbed cut swinging out before settling against her front cheeks, the hair short in the back.

“Of course.” Her employer picked up his pen and clicked it, giving a small pleased smile at the ease of its use, lips upturned but sealed against the fangs which didn’t fully retract during the first hour of wakefulness. “Vampires do like tyrants and closed cultures, as do most of those behind the veil except for the Bright Mages who love the attention, so a change toward that isn’t unexpected. Disappointing though. I’ve so enjoyed the open world and all the innovations. I had hoped things would remain open for a while longer. Europe looks good, and India and Africa are beginning to wiggle that way. South America is a lost cause; we won’t seek a port there. At least we are on the correct side of the continent for Europe.”

He pulled out his phone and typed a quick text.

After sending, he glanced up, his eyes bleeding slightly red from their normal brown “I’ll need 20 people for snackage, plus a 90-day supply.” He picked up the pen and started scribbling. “If you choose not to go, make it 22. I would like one of them to be your ex in either case.”

“Why on Earth, do you want that?”

“In case I need to kill someone. The others, they will need passports but illegals are okay. Healthy. A few other children are allowed, some playmates for yours.” His eyes turned bright red in a flash. “None of the others are to know.” The chocolate brown returned. “You will be able to talk to the skipper and the other three members of the crew about my special needs. Be respectful, they can jump into the ocean and leave us whenever they want.”

“What are th—”

“Weresharks, so respectful is good.” Bartholomew had a short shadow of something before clearing.

Her left hand gripped her right side at her waist, and her right hand reached for her shoulder. “Weresharks.”

“Not very edible, and their bite is deadly but not diseased. Their nature requires a few decades on land every century or two.” He shrugged, pushing the pink note with a list of instructions to her and pocketing the yellow one. “I befriended Fikret in Greece, and since then his clan keeps my ships during their two-leg times. A win-win situation, as you would say. They stay safe and near the water, and I have sailors who read the capricious ocean like the back of their fins.”

His phone beeped. “Ah, Gursel is Captain at the moment. If I remember proper, he would be about three thousand years old. The rest look like in their first few centuries.” His finger swiped a few times, reading the information quickly.

“Three thousand?!?”

“Sharks live a very long time.”

“But … you are five hundred. That’s old for a vampire.”

“In America. Not in Europe, and definitely not in China.” Bartholomew tucked his phone back into his back pocket. “Fikret remembers when Byblos was first settled. Took his third human wife from a timber seller there; dragging her to the depths with his spells and leaving her husband for dead. Said she smelled like cedar, even years later. Best I can figure, he is somewhere about seven millennium. And he is the fifth in line for his clan head.”

“Fifth?” Karyn licked her lips “And there are four on the ship as well. That’s a lot.”

“The weresharks have the whole ocean to themselves, except for a few seals.” That strange expression crossed the vampire face again. He was uncomfortable, maybe even a little scared. “Most clans run to the thousands.”

“So there are tens of thousands of them, much more than vampires.”

“More like tens of millions, and more than the rest of the human-form supernatural combined.”

Karyn blinked. What were the non-human-form supernatural? The rabbit hole was getting deep, and she wasn’t sure she wanted to know any more. “We’ll go. I got the kids passports when you visited the Council.”

“Splendid.” He moved to leave. “And don’t forget your ex.”

Bartholomew had been displeased when she had shown up with a swollen eye and bruised arms during Christmas because she had refused to give him access to the children or money to party. She almost felt sorry for Pete, if he hadn’t knocked her up at fifteen and knocked her around until he got arrested for dealing. Pity none of the big charges stuck, so he was only locked up for five years It was enough time for her to find her feet and most of her self-esteem, but not enough time … never enough time … to completely escape him.

She never had brought anyone to Bartholomew specifically to be killed before. But maybe in this time of crisis and chaos, it was time to move on.

(words 1,878; first published 8/30/2020)

Author Spotlight: Barb Hendee

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I first discovered Barb Hendee through the Dhampir/Nobel Dead series she co-wrote with her husband J.C. Hendee. The book sold in 2001 and by 2006 success as a writer team had allowed them to quit the day jobs and move to Oregon and just write. Then in 2011, even though they did all the right things – keep writing, keep in touch with their fans, were easy to work with – the market imploded when Borders gave up its fight. They, like many writers, suddenly found their royalty checks shrinking.

In her post “Don’t Quit Your Day Job” (9/20/2023 note – looks like she moved her website and has discontinued the blog aspects as part of concentrating on her day job), she discusses what it is like to be a successful writer … and then not be successful anymore.

She is still writing. The fourteenth (and last?) chapter of Nobel Dead came out in 2016. In addition, she is solo writing the Dark Glass Novels, where noble women faced with choices like stopping an assassination or choosing which of the king’s sons to marry look into a mirror and see those choices play out. Rarely are any of the futures fully happy, the question is which will the woman pick and how will it change her.

Barb Hendee may have returned to her day job, but she isn’t walking away from her night job. She loves writing too much.

Flash: Veronica Visits (Pets 2)

Photo by Malcolm Lightbody on Unsplash

Veronica rushed at human speeds from the hired car to the burrow door in the side of the hill where Reginald kept his underground residence as the last vestiges of the July sun beat down on the Mojave Desert. One of his servants held the thick, iron-banded door open. The man took her layered wrap and offered her a glass of clear liquid from a set of crystal near the door.

“I don’t drink water,” she shook her head declining the offer. Although she was thirsty enough to consider it, long experience had taught her how useless the attempt would be. Her host would set her up with something shortly.

“Ma’am, it’s plasma, not water.” The human extended the goblet to her. “We’ve found it helps with the dry air.”

Intrigued, she took the glass and sniffed it. Instead of the normal metallic scent of full blood, a slight cheese scent wafted up. The old Gaul vampire took a tentative sip. None of the richness of blood with the layers of life rippled over her taste buds. A clean, fresh taste, almost clear took its place. A little sweet taste unlike anything she could remember experiencing danced lightly on the tongue. With a swallow, the first non-blood in nearly a thousand years went down her throat. And, she closed her eyes in silent thanks, stayed down. Vomit was so messy.

Her body absorbed the liquid in a welcomed rush. Taking a second sip, Veronica nodded, “It will do.”

“Very good, my lady.” The human bowed, then stood and swung out an arm. “If you would follow me?”

Having never visited her blood brother before at his Las Vegas quarters, Veronica studied the interior of the underground stronghold as they walked. Sandstone cut walls held the outermost border. Inner walls alternated between variegated-colored sandstone and tasteful pale, almost white woods of different grains and were decorated with paintings of the desert by unknown artists of varying skill. The breathtaking art were the woven baskets, turquoise jewelry, and the pottery tucked into alcoves, displayed on shelves, and the best pieces isolated on pedestals with spotlight lighting. The overall look came across more open and much cleaner than the typical vampire packrat display of wealth. She wasn’t even certain how much wealth was on display; indigenous and modern pieces eluded her knowledge.

She found it refreshingly different.

Reginald always thought differently, outside the box as the modern saying went.

Her guide stopped in front of a double-door of stained glass in a dreamcatcher design. He opened the doors into a cozy library and after turning on the lights, stepped aside. “My lord will be with you shortly.”

Veronica entered the much more traditional space. Thick mid-eastern rugs decorated the floor, three heavy wooden chairs equal distant apart but all facing each other and allowing a clear view of the door, and a glorious library filled with volumes of books. Modern paperbooks pressed covers with medieval manuscripts. One section of textbooks and scientific volumes were stored behind glass. Two yellowed skeletons, one male and one female, which clearly had meat on them at one point, had been rethreaded to hold their shape. A smile touched her lips, two of Reginald’s favorite pets from the Old World still traveling with him after all this time.

The sidebar held crystal filled with clear liquid. Lifting the decanter she sniffed it, more plasma. Veronica shrugged and refilled her goblet. While thirsty, she wasn’t truly Thirsty yet. The blood plasma took the edge off. She might need to make arrangements for it back home. Having something different to drink was an experience.

The door opened and her host came in. “Veronica, this is surprise.”

“A pleasant one I hope,” setting down the goblet on the only empty side table by a chair, she crossed the room to kiss her brother’s cheeks.

“Indeed,” he said with cheerful agreement.

She ran the tones through her brain, tumbling them like rocks to find the core shape. In the New York coven, not a single word was spoken without extra meaning. Reginald either had gotten much better at hiding his true intent, or he remained as open and welcoming as the day he greeted her and their progenitor back on his family farm, thinking them lost nobility seeking shelter from a stormy night. He hadn’t changed in seven hundred years.

“Still sleeping in half the night?” she teased, moving to the seat she claimed.

He laughed as he walked to the sidebar and poured himself a goblet of the plasma. “Not all of us have the gift of daywalking.” He joined her, sitting at the chair with two side tables filled with books, and more surrounding it on the floor. The floor lamp light fell perfectly on his lap, hiding part of his face in shadows.

(words 804, first published 9/28/2022)

Pets for Vampires Series (Order of Creation)

        1. Pets: Another One, Reginald? (5/17/2020)
        2. Veronica Visits (Pets 2) (6/7/2020)
        3. Still See His Teeth (Pets 3) (11/29/2020)
        4. Hair of Dog (Pets for Vampires 4) (12/6/2020)

Book Review: Elena (Book 2 of Shadow and Blood)

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Elena (Daughters of Shadow and Blood Book 2) by J. Matthew Saunders

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Gračanica. Kosovo, 1689: Elena, an Albanian peasant girl, has sacrificed her own future to keep her family from starving, but one horrific night they are taken from her, murdered by monsters out of her nightmares. She seeks refuge at the nearby monastery, where she meets Stjepan, a Serbian monk familiar with creatures that stalk the night. Elena longs to return to her farm, but piecing her life back together may be impossible. Stjepan draws her into a dark conspiracy involving an ancient brotherhood, and as war looms, a stranger named Lek appears, threatening to overturn everything she thought she knew about her family and herself.

Sarajevo, Bosnia and Herzegovina, 1999: Since surviving the showdown between the vampire Yasamin and the terrorist group Süleyman’s Blade, Adam Mire has lived in hiding, posing as an unassuming Czech librarian. His life is upended again, however, when a new threat arises—one intent on using Dracula’s legacy to unleash another wave of violence across the already war-ravaged nation.

Meanwhile, Clara MacIntosh, the love Adam left behind, has come to Eastern Europe to find him. While tracking him down, she becomes entangled in a string of grisly murders—deaths Adam is investigating as well. As they both follow clues literally written in blood, time runs short to unmask the killer before history comes full-circle and chaos engulfs the region again.

 

MY REVIEW

Not quite as engrossing as the first book of the trilogy; Yasmin and the Ottoman Empire are a tough beginning to beat, both being powerhouses of beauty and death. Elena is much more quiet, the shadows are hers … a person you fall for even as you know she will kill you. The silent breeze brushing a moment against your throat.

Mr. Saunders again creates a compelling Bride, completely different from the first. The story continues to have the tangle of timelines – going over Elena’s story from the middle ages, the horror of present day Sarajevo, a quick side trip to Lord Bryon eighteen hundreds, etc. The mysteries deepen – where I thought the green hand was going is not necessarily where the trip will end. And as for the medallion – so many players are after it, Mr. Saunders has his work cut out for him to bring this to a satisfying conclusion in the final book.

A slightly slower book for the middle of the trilogy, but driving relentlessly forward to a conclusion with Mr. Saunders beautiful descriptive prose. The book works well both as a stand-alone and as part of the series; I would recommend reading the first book of the series first, but it is not required.

I lightly touched on the first book of the series in an author spotlight for Mr. Saunders: here.