"...the Corporate Transparency Act Beneficial Ownership Information rule (CTA BOI rule) has a looming deadline of JANUARY 1.
It is an unconstitutional rule that treats small business owners like financial criminals and has egregious penalties, including nearly $600 a day and jail time for non-compliance."
Saturday, December 21, 2024
Pour BOIR
Friday, December 20, 2024
Karen S. Wiesner {Put This One on Your TBR List} Book Review: "The Further Adventures of Ebenezer Scrooge" by Charlie Lovett
{Put This One on Your TBR List}
Book Review: "The Further Adventures of Ebenezer
Scrooge"
by Charlie Lovett
by Karen S. Wiesner
"Merry Christmas" ringing out in the sweltering heat of a June summer? What else would be on the lips of a transformed man after the events of "A Christmas Carol" (which was the focus of my December 22, 2023 column "The Practice of Benevolence {A Reflection on Dicken's A Christmas Carol}" https://aliendjinnromances.blogspot.com/2023/12/the-practice-of-benevolence-reflection.html). "The Further Adventures of Ebenezer Scrooge" by Charlie Lovett--author of such highly recommended literary mystery titles as The Bookman's Tale and First Impressions--was published in 2015, which came 172 years after Dickens' timeless tale.
In this, Scrooge's testimony of a transformed life, twenty years have passed since he was visited by the ghosts that changed everything in a single night. His radical shift, as the joy and benevolence of Christmas become an integral part of his daily life, have spilled over to those around him, altering them as well, but not always for the better. Scrooge gives of himself and his wealth sacrificially--leaving little or nothing for his own meager requirements--to all in need. Nothing discourages his cheer. However, the hard lessons he's learned haven't necessarily carried over to those he loves.
His nephew Fred (Freddie) has a wife and family, along with an uncompromising governmental position working for the assistant to the undersecretary. Unfortunately, he's grasped that, "with bills to pay…books to balance…a year older and not a farthing richer", he can afford no more than a few days of Christmas each year.
In Scrooge's own business, Bob Cratchit has been made a partner, only he's allowed his extreme work ethic to dominate his life to the exclusion of his once beloved family and their many grandchildren.
Meanwhile, the bankers (affectionately called Pleasant and Portly by Scrooge) have become more concerned with Scrooge's current balance of outstanding debt rather than "making some slight concession for the poor" not simply once a year at the holidays. Scrooge writes cheques his account can't cover in order to help the destitute running rampant in their city.
That evening, Scrooge is visited by the ghost of his former partner, Jacob Marley. His heavy chains of penance have been lessened by Scrooge's redemption--but only by five links. Marley holds no hope that he can ever decrease it more. Scrooge is determined to help his old friend eliminate the weighty burden and send him to a well-deserved rest. To do that, he calls upon the familiar spirits of Christmas Past, Present, and Future to teach valuable lessons about living Christmas charity all year round to Freddie, Bob, and the bankers.
Although I was originally put
off by the idea of the characters I knew and loved in the original story taking
on the less than appealing traits Scrooge once displayed (essentially becoming
hypocrites, as the only time of year that seemed to bring out goodwill in all
of them was at Christmas), I did find the evolving facets of their personality
realistic:
· In "A Christmas Carol", Scrooge's
nephew was very young, newly married, without a family and position as the
breadwinner and a member of society to weigh him down. With greater
responsibility come greater burdens.
· Cratchit was moved overnight from apprentice
to partner, and he'd known Scrooge long enough not to be fully trusting that
that situation couldn't change in a duplicitous heartbeat.
· And bankers…well, bankers are known for loving wealth, not spreading it around as if it's easy to come by.
I was also won over by how Lovett took familiar quotes from the original "paraphrasing, parodying, and plagiarizing passages" (as he says). Because of the clever repurposing Lovett did with those beloved sections, I began to notice that this story was structured and laid out almost scene by scene just as the original story had been. In that way, "The Further Adventures of Ebenezer Scrooge" stayed true to its processor.
Additionally, Lovett incorporated Dickens--also a great social reformer in his time, as his debatably most famous character Scrooge became--into this story with references of Dickens as a famous author in Scrooge's time. Finally, allusions were made to Dickens' other works, where he described the less fortunate in Victorian London in such works as Bleak House, Little Dorrit, David Copperfield, and others.
If you love re-reading the enduring morals taught in "A Christmas Carol" during the holidays as I do, you'll adore "The Further Adventures of Ebenezer Scrooge" any time of year as an apt reminder that not only can we bless others less fortunate than ourselves with our kindness and benevolence, but that we inevitably receive the same in exchange by opening our hands and our hearts. In this way, we also further the game-changing principle of "paying it forward" one precious life at a time.
Karen Wiesner is an award-winning,
multi-genre author of over 150 titles and 16 series.
Visit her website here: https://karenwiesner.weebly.com/
and https://karenwiesner.weebly.com/karens-quill-blog
Find out more about her books and see her art here: http://www.facebook.com/KarenWiesnerAuthor
Visit her publisher here: https://www.writers-exchange.com/Karen-Wiesner/
Thursday, December 19, 2024
Octopus Superpowers
I came across another article about the delightful weirdness and surprising intelligence of octopuses:
10 Incredible Facts About OctopusesIn addition to their amazing powers of camouflage, shapeshifting, and squeezing through tiny spaces, they can use tools, recognize people, and solve problems such as opening jars and navigating mazes. They would make an excellent template for an alien sapient species.
With their eight flexible arms, they arguably have a greater capacity for manipulating objects than we do. However, one problem would inhibit them from developing an advanced technological culture, no matter how intelligent they might become -- their aquatic environment. An underwater creature can't use fire and therefore can't work with metal.
One species, though, spends a nontrivial amount of its life on land:
Adopus AculeatusThis small octopus "lives on beaches walking from one tidal pool to the next hunting for crabs." We could imagine a planet rich in tidal ecosystems dominated by an intelligent population of amphibious octopuses. For them to invent what we'd consider an advanced civilization, though, their evolutionary history would need to include some urgent motivation for developing such skills. No doubt a clever science fiction author could come up with a plausible scenario to produce that result.
Unfortunately for Earth octopuses' prospect of developing intelligence to rival ours and filling an aquatic niche similar to the human land-bound role, their short lifespans and habit of dying soon after reproducing limit them. Creating a culture that could transmit knowledge from older to younger generations would require a mutation to lengthen their lives.
Another potential limitation might be their solitary lifestyle. Typically, most highly intelligent animals are social. Also, community cooperation would seem to be a requirement for a civilization -- at least, in the sense that we understand it.
An interesting side note: Their copper-based blood is blue. So why is Vulcan copper-based blood green? :)
Margaret L. Carter
Please explore love among the monsters at Carter's Crypt.
Sunday, December 15, 2024
Phthongs In A Twist
One of the most intelligent sfr authors of our day, Linnea Sinclair, once opined that even my laundry list would be entertaining. That compliment is very loosely remembered, and is apropos of almost nothing, since I am not writing about carelessly removed thongs.
Perish the thought!
Although, thinking of "knickers in a twist", "panties in a wad" and other underwear idioms, I came upon a great source. https://idioms.thefreedictionary.com/panties+in+a+wad
Last week, I mentioned speakers of diphthongs disparagingly... in haste, as an afterthought. I should not have done that, because I was wrong about the diphthongs. I apologize unreservedly. My examples were triphthongs.
With diphthongs, two adjacent vowels slide into one another. With triphthongs, both consecutive vowels are pronounced equally.
Alien is a triphthong. Alien - Ay-Lee-Un...not much different from maniac. May Nee Ak.
"In the triphthong ‘aia’ as in the word ‘dialysis’ / daɪˈælɪsɪs /, the aya has to be fully said and not cut short."
Friday, December 13, 2024
Beware Ignorance and Want by Karen S. Wiesner
Beware Ignorance and Want
by Karen S. Wiesner
From A Christmas Carol by Charles
Dickens:
They were a boy and girl. Yellow, meagre, ragged, scowling, wolfish; but prostrate, too, in their humility. Where graceful youth should have filled their features out, and touched them with its freshest tints, a stale and shrivelled hand, like that of age, had pinched, and twisted them, and pulled them into shreds. Where angels might have sat enthroned, devils lurked, and glared out menacing. No change, no degradation, no perversion of humanity, in any grade, through all the mysteries of wonderful creation, has monsters half so horrible and dread.
Scrooge started back, appalled. Having them shown to him in this way, he tried to say they were fine children, but the words choked themselves, rather than be parties to a lie of such enormous magnitude.
“Spirit! are they yours?” Scrooge could say no more.
“They are Man’s,” said the Spirit, looking down
upon them. “And they cling to me, appealing from their fathers. This boy is
Ignorance. This girl is Want. Beware them both, and all of their degree, but
most of all beware this boy, for on his brow I see that written which is Doom,
unless the writing be erased. Deny it!” cried the Spirit, stretching out its
hand towards the city. “Slander those who tell it ye! Admit it for your
factious purposes, and make it worse. And abide the end!”
The cells that make up the body--whether human, animal, or even
plant--are countless, diversified, and specialized. There are different types
that each do something special, all with the goal of working efficiently with
the rest of the cells. In this way, the body can run so smoothly, few of us are
even aware of their existence.
Some cells work with larger organisms within the body. For instance, white blood cells subject themselves to the determination of a higher function that assigns it specific duties. At the times when an invader enters the body, the white blood cell rushes toward danger, often forced to sacrifice itself for the sake of the function it serves. Both danger and self-sacrifice are at the heart of its very existence. For the greater good, it does what it has to in order to defend and keep the body alive.
Cells don't always work "in community" though. For whatever reason, a cell can become selfish and superior, working against the body with every fiber of its being to serve its own ends. A parasite or cancer cell, literally, considers nothing except its own survival and what it needs to thrive. They maintain complete independence of the whole while freely and selfishly partaking in the benefits of being part of the body. These cells leave the body in want, weaker and sickened.
In a similar way, individual cells that make up a body are like a community. When all are working together in one place, each undeniably functions better--to the best of their ability. Unconditionally, the individuals within the community share in the fruits and privileges of belonging together. Individual parts have no choice about whether they can live or thrive separate from the rest of the body. A hand, a foot, an eye--none of these can live apart from the rest of the body. But, by existing as a coherent team, everyone flourishes.
Also, like cells, communities don't always exist in harmony. A community at odds keeps all within it divided and at war, shrouded in the ignorance of shunning everything and everyone around them that doesn't fit a limited agenda.
Charles Dickens' beloved A Christmas Carol goes out of its way to show us that we can't choose a single day of the year to effect changes within a community that will benefit the whole. Social responsibility must be a daily, continuous pursuit. But so often our global body (our community) is ripped apart by self-focus and flavor of the day, hot-button disagreements. Like cancer cells or parasites, these agendas feed off the slightest bit of hate, superiority, ignorance, and want.
Another universal truth highlighted in A Christmas Carol is that, when everyone is treating everyone else with respect, regardless of natural or preferential diversity, they become "…fellow-passengers to the grave, and not another race of creatures bound on other journeys." Every part that makes up a body is unique and crucial, even if it's unaware of all each does to make the whole better and healthy. All are equal. None are superior. Humility, acceptance, cooperation, and daily goodwill are the only ways for a body and a community to function.
This time of the year and every other, human beings can learn a lot from the way our own bodies function in the ideal when every part is grateful for the rest.
Karen Wiesner is an
award-winning, multi-genre author of over 150 titles and 16 series.
Visit her website here: https://karenwiesner.weebly.com/
and https://karenwiesner.weebly.com/karens-quill-blog
Find out more about her books and see her art here: http://www.facebook.com/KarenWiesnerAuthor
Visit her publisher here: https://www.writers-exchange.com/Karen-Wiesner/
Thursday, December 12, 2024
Old-Fashioned Holidays
Having recently discovered we own a copy of Washington Irving's SKETCH BOOK, published around 1820 (one of the books we inherited from my mother-in-law, many of which I shelved without looking at closely), I read his essays/stories about English festivities surrounding Christmas Eve, Christmas day, and Christmas dinner. The narrator, an American visiting England, comments with delight on the customs of the season. The host, a merry old squire, insists on keeping the time-honored traditions as he understands them. None of this modern stuff allowed! Centuries-old songs are sung, games of venerable vintage are played, wassailers are welcomed, the Yule log is burned, a decorated pig's head is ceremoniously carried to the dinner table in lieu of a boar's head. The kindly old gentleman, however, is widely considered eccentric for his devotion to the past. Some of the guests carefully chosen from among the "decent" subset of the local peasantry snicker behind his back. Although the narrator enjoys the celebrations, he makes it clear that the squire is reconstructing traditional customs as he imagines them, not passing them on unbroken from previous generations.
According to THE BATTLE FOR CHRISTMAS, by Stephen Nissenbaum, our concept of an "old-fashioned Christmas" derives in large part from these "sketches" by Irving as well as "A Visit from Saint Nicholas" (aka "The Night Before Christmas"), by his contemporary Clement Clarke Moore, and of course Dickens' A CHRISTMAS CAROL. Nissenbaum offers strong evidence that the Saint Nicholas legend brought to life by Moore didn't cross over intact from Holland. Instead, Santa Claus as popularized in early 19th-century New York and immortalized by Moore was "a conscious reconstruction. . . an invented tradition."
Similarly, Nissenbaum's research reveals that the Christmas tree constituted a purely local custom in a small area of Germany until it became nationwide only in the late 18th century. Moreover, instead of spontaneously spreading from German immigrant communities to the wider American population, Christmas trees first became familiar to the general public from literary sources. Yet already by the mid-19th century people would casually remark that of course they always displayed a tree, as if it were a long-established tradition. Popularization of trees, Santa Claus, and gift-giving went along with the invention of the domestic, child-centered holiday, replacing the REAL "old-fashioned Christmas." To us, the older celebration would look like a rowdy blend of Halloween, Thanksgiving, and New Year's Eve.
Invented traditions continue to spring up in our own era. How could we now imagine the American Christmas season without Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer annually appearing on TV? Yet his story was originally written as an advertising giveaway book for the Montgomery Ward department store in 1939. In a short essay published in the 1950s, C. S. Lewis complains of the Yuletide "commercial racket," implying the phenomenon had intruded on the season quite recently. As Nissenbaum describes at length, though, commercialization of gift-giving infested the child-centered holiday from the beginning. The film A CHRISTMAS STORY, what I think of as "the BB gun movie," presumably set pre-World-War-II like the book it's based on, showcases a department store Santa in a lavishly consumerist setting.
In my childhood home, Christmas traditions included having the extended family over on Christmas Eve, emerging from our bedrooms the next morning to the sight of a dazzling spread of presents from Santa, and driving to my grandmother's house for Christmas dinner. (When I could get away with it, I sat in a corner reading a new book; I figured that shouldn't be a problem because the adults would be talking to each other, not to me, anyway.) Our kids' Christmas traditions, in addition to church, festive dinners, and gifts, involved watching programs such as Rudolph, Charlie Brown, the Grinch (the Boris Karloff cartoon, of course!), and later the BB gun movie. Nowadays, with the prevalence of streaming media, the custom of a family gathering around the TV to watch one show together threatens to die out, if it hasn't already. What will our great-grandchildren (we currently have four) look back on as cherished holiday traditions that have "always" been done?
For many of us, a "traditional" holiday means customs as we imagine them having been celebrated in our grandparents' childhoods, whenever that may have been. "Over the river and through the woods. . . ." With snow, naturally, "dreaming of a white Christmas," even if we live in a region where the most we can expect are a few flurries in January. As Rudyard Kipling's ode of farewell to Romance -- in the sense of an imagined, ideal past more romantic than the dull, mundane present -- concludes, "Then taught his chosen bard to say: Our king was with us -- yesterday."
Margaret L. Carter
Please explore love among the monsters at Carter's Crypt.
Sunday, December 08, 2024
Less Envy
The simplest, five-word mnemonic for the difference between jealous and envious is:
" n Julius Caesar, Antony describes Casca as envious to highlight Casca's underlying jealousy and discontent. This characterization serves to illustrate the personal and political motivations driving Casca's involvement in the conspiracy against Caesar."
"In French, a negative sentence is formed by using the words "ne", “n’ ”, and "pas" around a verb. "Ne" comes before the verb, and "pas" follows it.
For example, "Je ne parle pas" means "I don't speak". The placement of "ne" and "pas" around the verb is the most basic form of creating a negative statement."
Friday, December 06, 2024
{Put This One on Your TBR List} Book Review: Dragon Age: Tevinter Nights Edited by Chris Bain, Patrick Weekes, Matthew Goldman, and Christopher Morgan by Karen S. Wiesner
{Put This One on Your TBR List}
Book Review: Dragon Age: Tevinter
Nights
Edited by Chris Bain, Patrick Weekes, Matthew Goldman, and
Christopher Morgan
by Karen S. Wiesner
Warning Spoilers!
Prior to Dragon Age: The Veilguard's release (which I reviewed last week and you'll probably want to refer back to in reading the reviews of these strongly connected individual tales), a new anthology of short stories was released in March 2020 called Tevinter Nights. As the name implies, all the stories are set in Dragon Age's Thedas, many directly in the Tevinter Imperium, where magic-wielding magisters rule and blood magic isn't forbidden. I bought the book (complete with a gorgeous, foldout, color map) at the time of its publication and read it, but since The Veilguard was still in development at that time (and wasn't even named that until later), I felt like I didn't understand where all the stories were coming from. Following the release of The Veilguard, I got it out again and started rereading it. With a much better understanding of all the things going on around the events of the new game, I enjoyed the stories immensely. In fact, it may be the only anthology collection that I enjoyed every single one of the stories included. The tagline of this collection really says it all: "Ancient horrors. Marauding invaders. Powerful mages. And a world that refuses to stay fixed… Welcome to Thedas." Dragon Age is everything I look for in the fantasy genre and then some.
In this collection, readers are getting a real treat with stories written by nine BioWare staff writers who really know the world contained in the Dragon Age franchise that includes but isn't limited to videogames, electronic games, books, comics, film and television, tabletop roleplaying games, and music. As I said last week, you might be interested in my previous review of all things Dragon Age, which is here: https://aliendjinnromances.blogspot.com/2022/11/karen-wiesner-fiction-series-so-big.html.
Below you'll find reviews of
every story in the collection. Be aware that a major plot angle in Dragon Age: The Veilguard videogame centers around
ancient Tevinter artifacts being stolen or unearthed in order to aid the evil
that wants to take over the world. So several of these short tales have that as
a major theme. Below, I've listed each story in the order they appear in the
original publication.
1. "Three Trees to
Midnight" by Patrick Weekes: At the time The Veilguard is set, there's a qunari invasion going on in Thedas
that's changing the world. This first story focuses on their capture of a Dalish
elf Veil Jumper named Strife (who's featured in the videogame along with
Irelin, a team-mate also in this story) and a mage named Myrion. Qunari deeply
distrust and put down mages, so Myrion has to hide his powers once he's
captured. He's chained to the elf Strife. Tevinter magisters treat elves as
nothing more than slaves. So there was a lot of "Enemy Mine" racial
prejudice in this this story as the two are forced to work together in order to
escape their relentless captors.
2. "Down Among the
Dead Men" by Sylvia Feketekuty: The Mourn Watch are the elite guardians of
the Grand Necropolis, reverently caring for the dead. They're also a faction of
a larger organization, the Mortalitasi.
In Inquisition, I was led to believe the
Moralitasi are all evil, but in The Veilguard,
I learned that's not always the case. We met one of their order, Emmrich, in Veilguard, along with his beloved
skeletal companion Manfred, and I was pleased to see them play a role in this
particular story in which a guardsman investigates a death in the Necropolis.
Very intriguing setting in both the game and this wonderful story with a twist
ending.
3. "The Horror of
Hormak" by John Epler: My
favorite part of Dragon Age has always been the Grey Wardens, those who give so
sacrificially in order to maintain a constant vigilance over the return of darkspawn
and potential Blights. This story has two Wardens investigating the
disappearance of a scouting party. This story is horror in its purest, most
intriguing form, and it was an instant favorite of mine.
4. "Callback" by Lukas Kristjanson: Dragon Age: Inquisition had an unmarked quest about
"Sutherland and Company" that was mainly followed through War Table
operations. If you didn't screw these up and prematurely end the venture, they
culminated in an actual crusade for the Inquisitor to save Sutherland and his band
of misfits. In this story, the Inquisition has disbanded but their headquarters
Skyhold is still maintained by caretakers that haven't been heard from in a
while. Sutherland and Company are sent by the Inquisitor to investigate. I
loved revisiting Skyhold and these uber-loyal, unlikely heroes.
5. "Luck in the
Gardens" by Sylvia Feketekuty: Another beloved Inquisition character, Dorian, makes an appearance in this fun
story in which a member of the Lords of Fortune (from The Veilguard) investigates a series of monster killings in
Minrathous.
6. "Hunger" by Brianne Battye: In The Veilguard, we're introduced to two
married Grey Wardens, Evka and Antoine. This story takes place while these new
recruits are traveling to report for duty at Weisshaupt Fortress. They're
sidetracked in a town cursed by mysterious and monstrous deaths. This was a
neat background to the roles these two end up playing in the videogame, and a
precursor to their romance.
7.
"Murder
by Death Mages" by Caitlin
Sullivan Kelly: Mortalitasi is the umbrella organization of "death
mages" in the Grand Necropolis that advise Nevarran nobility. The
Pentaghast family (re: Cassandra from Inquisition)
were some of the founders. Though the group is well-respected in Nevarra,
outside they're feared as a cult. The current ruler of Nevarra is aged and
weak, his sanity uncertain, and most believe the Mortalitasi are ruling through
him. Cassandra Pentaghast, one of the
Inquisition's inner circle, assigns a volunteer in the Inquisition to
investigate the death of a death mage. This Inquisition mage volunteer was
raised by and eventually abandoned this particular death mage, vowing never to
return to Nevarra. A Mortalitasi member is suspected of causing political
unrest in order to assassinate Nevarra's ruler. Both Cassandra and this investigator
have a lot at stake in seeing this situation resolved. While the point-of-view
character wasn't exactly lovable, with baggage that's made her bitter and
withdrawn, the story had an intriguing whodunit with a lot of complications to
keep it suspenseful.
8. "The Streets of
Minrathous" by Brianne Battye: Neve Gallus is one of the main companions
in The Veilguard, a member of the
Shadow Dragons, and a supernatural detective. In the videogame, her loyalty
quests all involve a Venatori agent, Aelia, who's trying to subjugate
Minrathous (isn't it ironic how often a tyrant calls it "freeing" a
population?). This story is the background to all of that--and it's also here
we find out what happened to the Templar Brom, something only referenced in the
videogame. I enjoyed this setup to a pivotal character in the game.
9. "The Wigmaker
Job" by Courtney Woods: Another inner circle Veilguard member, Lucanis
Dellamorte, is an Antivan Crow assassin. We learn much more of his background
in this story detailing a heist with his cousin Illario (also featured in the
videogame), which doesn't get into how Lucanis came to have a demon inhabiting
his body, which is a focus of the game.
10. "Genitivi Dies in
the End" by Lukas Kristjanson: The
Veilguard Lords of Fortune are included in this crazy, off-beat story that
I really don't even know how to describe beyond that a weird group containing a
bard, a brother in the Chantry, a qunari mage, and a writer take on qunari
Antaam (military) in order to steal some ancient elven artifacts. It seems they
did this for the sole purpose of their art--in other words, so they'd have
something exciting to write about for their ravenous fans to devour. Writers
will appreciate this literary escapade, highlighting the extreme lengths
authors will go to get a great story.
11. "Herold Had the
Plan" by Ryan Cormier: Two Lords of Fortune (one who recently lost his
adventuring partner Herold of four decades) stealthily steal an ancient
Tevinter relic that heals even the deadliest of wounds during a Grand Tourney.
Unfathomably, every knight in the arena is instantly on their tails. Before
long, they realize that their third partner-in-crime has stolen the tourney's
grand prize right off the grandstand--the legendary Celebrant greatsword. This
was a fun, thrilling story that had unexpected depth and heart at its core.
12. "An Old Crow's Old
Tricks" by Arone Le Bray: Lessef of the Antivan Crows fulfills the
contract to exact vengeance on those who murdered the Dalish elf clan Oranava.
This was a clever story that took a bit to coalesce and make sense, as it's
told mainly from the points-of-view of those about to be assassinated who
foolishly think they're invincible.
13. "Eight Little Talons" by Courtney Woods: This was probably my favorite in the collection. Here, the author has done an Agatha Christie, following the style of And Then There Were None. The eight major players that head the Antivan Crows are called "Talons" and the hierarchy is from Talon 8 being the lowest of them, to Talon 1 being the highest ranking. Along with their fellow Talons, #5 Talon Viago and #7 Teia (who are featured in The Veilguard) are called to a summit at the First Talon's island home to discuss the qunari and the security of their nation, Treviso. One by one, the Talons are picked off at this secluded meeting, each death re-enacting infamous Crow assassins of the past. This is an obvious statement that no other Crows are safe. In this location, the killer is either hiding somewhere on the island or it's one of their own. (Intriguing--Crows hunting Crows.) Viago and Teia investigate. I loved both of these well-drawn characters, and their obvious attraction to each other sets the stage for their compelling banter in the videogame.
14. "Half Up Front" by John Epler: Another Tevinter artifact--Dumat's Folly (a puzzle that needed to be solved in the Dragon Age II DLC Legacy)--has been stolen. A thief is hired to find out who stole it from the Chantry and why--and to steal it back. The events in this tale directly play into the videogame, which really adds more dimension to that story, since this artifact is one that's integral to Solas/Fen-Harel's ultimate plan. I will also note that the story reminded me a lot of the events in the manga TV miniseries, Dragon Age: Absolution, which aired on Netflix in December 2022 and takes place around the time of The Veilguard. In Absolution, the Inquisition employs two members of the Absolution team, one of them its agent Fairbanks, who was a freedom fighter that asked the Inquisition to reclaim his home, the Emerald Graves. None of the other characters in the miniseries are recognizable, to me anyway. (The voices are very familiar for those who play videogames though.) While I really can't stand anime and manga and therefore I had a lot of trouble getting through even three of the six episodes available in the first season, there were some fun moments in the early episodes and the overall story had a really good twist I didn't see coming (I read a summary of the final episodes rather than forcing myself to watch them). Fans of the series that enjoy anime or manga would probably get much more out of Absolution than I did. Suffice it to say that the story in Absolution paralleled a lot of what was in "Half Up Front", almost too closely. At first, I even though they were the same characters from one to the other, though they weren't. In the end, I felt like one of these was redundant, as they're so similar as to be the same story. I believe "Half Up Front" is probably the most valuable, as it points directly to events in The Veilguard.
15. "The Dread Wolf
Take You" by Patrick Weekes: "May
the Dread Wolf take you" is an old Dalish curse that gives this story
even more meaning. The main character, Charter, was one of Leliana's top spies
from Dragon Age: Inquisition. In this
story, she's called together a clandestine meeting of Thedas's top spies in
order to share information about Solas and his plans to restore the ancient
elven empire by tearing down the Veil. In this secret place are a Carta
assassin, a Moralitasi, an "Executor" from across the sea, and an
Orlesian bard. Each tells a piece of the tale, and it becomes clear that the
target for each of their encounters with Solas was the red lyrium idol that was
the cause of destruction in Kirkwall in DA II.
Little does Charter realize that the cloak-and-dagger meeting has an unexpected
guest! I read this story all but holding my breath. I couldn't identify any of
the characters other than Charter, but it was very clear that this was the setup
for events (and even some of the pivotal settings) about to unfold in The Veilguard.
For anyone following my reviews of short story collections and my philosophy about how short story collections should be arranged, I think the editors did a fantastic job of exactly placing every story in Tevinter Nights in the order needed for optimal reading. The slightly weaker stories are wonderfully anchored and buoyed by the stronger ones with the strongest ones as the first, last, and middle.
In one sense, Tevinter Nights may not be a good introduction into the world explored in the Dragon Age series, since a lot of the material requires a bit of understanding in how the world of Thedas is run, the crucial events, etc. But, in another, these are just well-written, slice of life stories, a lot of which include magic, mages, mysteries, monsters, and intricate political machinations. Even if you're not familiar with DA lore, there's still lot to love here and, if you're ultimately lured in by these compelling tales, there's so much more to explore in this expansive realm.
Karen Wiesner is an
award-winning, multi-genre author of over 150 titles and 16 series.
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