![]() After a short, emotional cutscene condemning the twisted legacy of Neltharion, both Wrathion and Sabellian declare they no longer want to be Aspect, leaving Ebyssian to take up the mantle instead. After cleaning out the last pockets of resistance in Aberrus, the contenders to the Obsidian Throne, as well as Emberthal and Ebyssian, discuss the future. Once players defeat Sarkareth in the Aberrus raid from Dragonflight, they unlock A Flame, Extinguished, the final chapter of the Embers of Neltharion campaign. The full campaign for Patch 10.1 of World of Warcraft was recently made available. RELATED: World of Warcraft: New Infinite Dragon Assets Could Mean Something Big for Dragonflight Patch 10.1, Embers of Neltharion, brought this struggle into the spotlight by focusing heavily on the atrocities committed by the former Aspect. Since the Dragonflight expansion started, the core conflict with the reformed Black Dragonflight has been whether Wrathion or Sabellian would lead it into World of Warcraft’s future. Warning: Spoilers for Dragonflight: Embers of Neltharion below. The contest that began with World of Warcraft: Dragonflight has finally ended, though in a rather different way than anyone anticipated. ![]() World of Warcraft officially has a new Aspect for the Black Dragonflight. ![]()
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![]() “Few novelists write as well, and none as beautifully. The rest of the cast overplays their parts and none of them come across as real. David Keith is likable enough, and does a fair job considering what he has to deal with. “A work of enormous power, passion, humor, and wisdom sweeps the reader along on a great tide of honest, throbbing emotion.” - The Washington Star The Lords of Discipline is a slow-moving, dull, boring, and badly acted 1980s film. ![]() “If you are reading another book when you begin The Lords of Discipline, prepare to set it aside.” - The Denver Post The year is 1964 and Carolina Military Institute has admitted, for the first time, a young black man into its freshman class. ![]() ![]() Immersed in a poignant love affair with a haunting beauty, Will must boldly confront the terrifying injustice of a corrupt institution as he struggles to expose a mysterious group known as “The Ten.” We go deep into the heart of the novel’s hero, Will McLean, a rebellious outsider with his own personal code of honor who is battling into manhood the hard way. ![]() In this powerful, mesmerizing, and acclaimed bestseller, Pat Conroy sweeps us into the turbulent world of four young men-friends, cadets, and blood brothers-and their days of hazing, heartbreak, pride, betrayal, and, ultimately, humanity. The acclaimed bestseller about upheaval at a Southern military academy, hailed by Larry King as “an American classic,” by the legendary author of The Prince of Tides and The Great Santini. ![]() ![]() ![]() Is the book about the mayor, city council, firefighters, factories, or what? He is too scared to even delve into the real economics of the collapse of Detroit's car industry. The details of the book are told in a head spinning back and forth manner that epitomizes the poor edit quality. It's like the publisher came back and said you need another twenty pages and he decided to go ahead and fill it with his story. LeDuff skips around, sprinkling in autobiographical details here and there, then finally decides to tell his autobiography at the end of the book. Trying to follow the narrative of the story is worse and you come out feeling there was no editor. As the reader fumbled over these literary gaffs you think, gosh, where was the editor. First, LeDuff uses similes that seem picked at random from a quote book with little thought as to their appropriateness and or clarity. LeDuff's clunky writing style with horribly placed similes, disjointed narrative, and poor choice of main characters make this a really tough read. ![]() It is frustrating when a fascinating topic falls into the hands of an incapable writer. ![]() |