Orcs: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
Content added Content deleted
m (revise quote template spacing)
m (update links)
Line 12: Line 12:
Not to be confused [[Similarly Named Works|with the 2011 film]] ''Orcs!''.
Not to be confused [[Similarly Named Works|with the 2011 film]] ''Orcs!''.
{{tropelist}}
{{tropelist}}
* [[Zero-Percent Approval Rating]]: Jennesta among her own army (the orcs even start {{spoiler|deserting en masse}}).
* [[0% Approval Rating]]: Jennesta among her own army (the orcs even start {{spoiler|deserting en masse}}).
* [[Action Girl]]: Corporal Coilla. Justified in that she's, well, an orc.
* [[Action Girl]]: Corporal Coilla. Justified in that she's, well, an orc.
* [[Always Chaotic Evil]]: Subverted as ''every'' race has its villains and heroes.
* [[Always Chaotic Evil]]: Subverted as ''every'' race has its villains and heroes.

Revision as of 00:02, 12 August 2014

"Stryke couldn't see the ground for corpses."

A series of fantasy novels by Stan Nichols now entering its second trilogy. The first trilogy, called Orcs: First Blood, consisted of Bodyguard of Lightning, Legion of Thunder, and Warriors of the Tempest.

Stryke is the Captain of the Wolverines, an orc warband that was sold into the service of Queen Jennesta, a depraved half-human half-nyadd sorceress who fights in a war between the Manis (those who follow the Manifold Path with many gods) and the Unis (those who believe in only one god) in Maras Dantia, the land whose magic is slowly being "eaten" by the humans.

During one mission, where Jennesta commanded them to retrieve an ancient artifact, the warband falls into misfortune: a group of kobolds steals the artifact. The Wolverines' search for it (and, eventually, others) becomes a bloody trip through Maras Dantia, where they encounter religious fanatics, trolls, and three very determined bounty hunters.

A second trilogy, Orcs: Bad Blood, is being published. The first two books, Weapons of Magical Destruction and Army of Shadows, are out, with the third and final book on its way.

Not to be confused with the 2011 film Orcs!.

Tropes used in Orcs include: