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- Path: sparky!uunet!usc!chaph.usc.edu!aludra.usc.edu!not-for-mail
- From: fields@aludra.usc.edu (Canis)
- Newsgroups: alt.horror.werewolves
- Subject: Heart of Midnight (minor spoilers)
- Followup-To: alt.horror.werewolves
- Date: 29 Dec 1992 17:12:32 -0800
- Organization: University of Southern California, Los Angeles, CA
- Lines: 49
- Sender: fields@aludra.usc.edu (Canis)
- Distribution: world
- Message-ID: <1hqt20INN6ct@aludra.usc.edu>
- References: <1992Dec29.154002.1@ccsua.ctstateu.edu>
- NNTP-Posting-Host: aludra.usc.edu
- Keywords: werewolf, Ravenloft
-
- In article <1992Dec29.154002.1@ccsua.ctstateu.edu> berry@ccsua.ctstateu.edu writes:
- >HAS ANY ONE STARTED REAFING THE RAVENLOFT NOVELS,FROM TSR. THE BOOK HEART
- >OF MIDNIGHT IS ABOUT WEREWOLVES.
- > GIVE ME YOUR INSIGHT INTO THE BOOK,IAM A FAN OF WEREWOLVES AND THE HORROR
- >GENRE
- >
-
- Well, since you asked so nicely <grin>.
-
- I haven't quite finished the book yet - only about 3/4 of the way done -
- but I can tell you that it's not exactly the best werewolf book I've ever
- read. Like all Ravenloft novels, the setting is in the demiplane of
- Gothic horror, and the main character, Casimir, is the werewolf in
- question. He's a natural lycanthrope (meaning that he inherited his
- lycanthropy) and, at first, is able to keep his "dark, wolfen side" (feh!)
- in check. The more he uses his abilities, though, the less control he
- is able to maintain, especially when he accepts one of the local baddies
- as his mentor.
-
- As a werewolf story, it's not *too* bad. J. Robert King (the author) gives
- the reader some insight into the trials and tribulations of being a
- werewolf. However, it's nothing anyone in this newsgroup probably hasn't
- read before - typical descriptions of senses being heightened, the loss
- of control in full-wolf form, etc. But what disappoints me is that there
- seems to be so little of it, for a werewolf book. _Heart of Midnight_
- reads as if the author was trying to work with too many subplots, and the
- werewolf aspect was left behind. I suppose that's because Casimir wasn't
- all too eager to be a werewolf in the first place (silly boy! ;-). But
- there wasn't much substance to the story. Even the attempt to cure Casimir
- wasn't done very well. What I did enjoy was the dialogue; the poetry and
- songs (some of them, anyway), and the bantering that goes on at the
- meistersinger contest. And of course, what little werewolfery there was
- <sharptooth grin>.
-
- In essence, _Heart of Midnight_ is a fairly predictable werewolf novel
- that, on a scale of 1 to 10, I'd tentatively give about a "4". And just
- for comparison, I would give Robert McCammon's _The Wolf's Hour_ a
- solid "10".
-
- Hopefully, the last 75 pages or so will be better. ;-)
-
- -Lanny.
-
- Lanny Fields
- fields@aludra.usc.edu
- Canis
-
-
- "To were is wolfen, to forgive, lupine."
-