Continuation of "Maginarium" (but all the characters will be reintroduced, so you can probably read "Lord of Storm" without having read the first book (too obvious a clever marketing ploy, eh?)).
So just in case, I'll write again what kind of series this is: 97.9% humor, 0.5% heart, 1.5% drama and 0.1% romance (in the author's humble opinion). The series was inspired by such works as "The Wheel of Time" by Robert Jordan, "Discworld" by Terry Pratchett, "One Piece" by Eiichiro Oda, "Cosmer" by Brandon Sanderson and many other fantasy novels. I wanted to write a metaphor about which of these authors penned the recipe, who prepared it, and who stood nearby and hurried everyone, but it would read as if I thought my work was at their level, which is not the case.
The plot becomes more ambitious and dramatic. It's still a humorous fantasy, but now it's moving from heroic to epic storytelling, with a lot of characters whose stories will eventually merge into one main plot.
Thoughts of currentcharacters are highlighted in italics. Loud demonic voices are indicated bysmall caps. Changes of character perspective are marked by different separatorscorresponding to each character.
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Lord of Storm
FantasyWinter has descended upon the region - not through the turn of the season, but with the arrival of a northern faction whose power threatens to shift the balance between the region's key players. Gloomeye seeks to safeguard the revived Worldedge, whi...