![]() ![]() Framing the Guilty Party: In The Death of the Necromancer, one of the villains framed an innocent man for murder and necromancy.The prequel, "The Element of Fire," has a quasi-Elizabethan setting, and the protagonist uses a wheel-lock gun in the first chapter. Guns exist side-by-side with knights, swordplay, and magic (including that of the eponymous necromancer). Fantasy Gun Control: Averted in Death of the Necromancer.Chekhov M.I.A.: Nicholas Valiarde in the Fall of Ile-Rien trilogy.And the reason they do it is at least partly because it's bad for business. Somehow, this leads to the group spending the rest of the book fighting an insane mass murderer. Nic has spent years sabotaging his enemy on a Roaring Rampage of Revenge at the start of the narrative, Nic's nearing the completion of his ultimate scheme when he and his subordinates run afoul of an unknown person using Black Magic. Black-and-Gray Morality: Death of the Necromancer has Nicholas Valiarde, a coldblooded thief, murderer and all around Magnificent Bastard.Martha Wells is an American science fiction and fantasy writer. ![]()
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