ParanetOnline

The Dresden Files => DF Spoilers => Topic started by: ClintACK on July 04, 2017, 10:04:48 PM

Title: A Fistful of Warlocks (SPOILERS: FISTFUL OF WARLOCKS)
Post by: ClintACK on July 04, 2017, 10:04:48 PM
Happy 4th of July.  A new Dresden Files short story arrived on my Kindle this morning.  What a wonderful present!  (in the anthology Straight Outta Tombstone)

Obviously, a day filled with other things so I've only read the story once.  :)

Eye-popping moments:
(click to show/hide)

Definitely enjoyed the story.  Will be reading it again.
Title: Re: A Fistful of Warlocks (SPOILERS: FISTFUL OF WARLOCKS)
Post by: jonas on July 05, 2017, 01:26:43 AM
Is that out?? What is on in on paper? I want!
Title: Re: A Fistful of Warlocks (SPOILERS: FISTFUL OF WARLOCKS)
Post by: ClintACK on July 05, 2017, 03:04:01 AM
The book is:    Straight Outta Tombstone
Edited By:      David Bloop

Amazon shows it available now in e-book and in stock in paperback.
Title: Re: A Fistful of Warlocks (SPOILERS: FISTFUL OF WARLOCKS)
Post by: Mira on July 05, 2017, 06:17:58 AM


Wow!  A great gift for the 4th! ;D
Title: Re: A Fistful of Warlocks (SPOILERS: FISTFUL OF WARLOCKS)
Post by: Zaphodess on July 05, 2017, 07:35:14 AM
Somebody must ask Jim about the backstory to this one

(click to show/hide)
Title: Re: A Fistful of Warlocks (SPOILERS: FISTFUL OF WARLOCKS)
Post by: Darkest-Before-Dawn on July 05, 2017, 09:12:00 AM
Thoroughly enjoyed this one, although it was midnight in the UK when I remembered it was out but of course I had to stay up and read it.

Somebody must ask Jim about the backstory to this one

(click to show/hide)

That's a really interesting point.

(click to show/hide)
Title: Re: A Fistful of Warlocks (SPOILERS: FISTFUL OF WARLOCKS)
Post by: Serack on July 05, 2017, 01:32:15 PM
Somebody must ask Jim about the backstory to this one

(click to show/hide)

Jim had his Reddit podcast Q&A around the time he wrote Fist Full of Warlocks and said this:

Quote from: 2016 DF Reddit podcast Q&A (https://youtu.be/4Gmu76ritoQ?t=2959)
Eb took up the Blackstaff in 1884-1885 somewhere in there.  The Blackstaff chooses his successor. 

Which is only a year or 3 after the events of Fist Full of Warlocks.  Could be related to your question.
Title: Re: A Fistful of Warlocks (SPOILERS: FISTFUL OF WARLOCKS)
Post by: Zaphodess on July 05, 2017, 02:22:35 PM
Thanks, Serack. I forgot about this, cause I had the New Madrid earthquake of 1811 as a starting point for Eb's Blackstaff career in mind.  :)

It really fits too well to be coincidence.
Title: Re: A Fistful of Warlocks (SPOILERS: FISTFUL OF WARLOCKS)
Post by: Aminar on July 05, 2017, 02:48:15 PM
Jim had his Reddit podcast Q&A around the time he wrote Fist Full of Warlocks and said this:

Which is only a year or 3 after the events of Fist Full of Warlocks.  Could be related to your question.
Near as I can tell the story is in 1877. So almost a decade, but not a terribly long time. (As that appears to be when Earp and Bat were working as deputies in Dodge city.)
From wikipedia.
(click to show/hide)
Title: Re: A Fistful of Warlocks (SPOILERS: FISTFUL OF WARLOCKS)
Post by: Snark Knight on July 05, 2017, 04:07:10 PM
Thanks, Serack. I forgot about this, cause I had the New Madrid earthquake of 1811 as a starting point for Eb's Blackstaff career in mind.  :)
It really fits too well to be coincidence.

Wait, were we just assuming he'd done New Madrid all along? Somehow I'd got the impression it was one of the ones he admitted to Harry in BR (along with Krakatoa and Tunguska).

Edit: Krakatoa was 1883. So I guess either he pretty much used the Blackstaff immediately upon taking it up to cause the eruption (and it's within the margin of error to Jim's ca. 1884-85 answer), or the eruption broke both the laws on time travel and collateral damage of mortal lives.
Title: Re: A Fistful of Warlocks (SPOILERS: FISTFUL OF WARLOCKS)
Post by: Serack on July 05, 2017, 04:36:00 PM
Near as I can tell the story is in 1877. So almost a decade, but not a terribly long time. (As that appears to be when Earp and Bat were working as deputies in Dodge city.)
From wikipedia.
(click to show/hide)

I've never spent a lot of time reading up on the Wild West, so when I beta'd the story, I looked up information on Earp and Dodge City, and landed on the "Dodge City War (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dodge_City_War)" as the timing for the short story, since it pretty closely resembles Earp's description of the tensions in the city/saloon.  Hence my estimate of the timing between the two events. 
Title: Re: A Fistful of Warlocks (SPOILERS: FISTFUL OF WARLOCKS)
Post by: Rasins on July 05, 2017, 07:05:14 PM
I have a theory that the Blackstaff can removed ALL black magic taint from it's user.  Even taint that was gained prior to the Blackstaff's acquisition.

Therefore, it's possible that Eb did some horrendeous things before acquiring the BS, and the BS cleaned him up aftwards.
Title: Re: A Fistful of Warlocks (SPOILERS: FISTFUL OF WARLOCKS)
Post by: Mira on July 05, 2017, 07:30:59 PM
Wait, were we just assuming he'd done New Madrid all along? Somehow I'd got the impression it was one of the ones he admitted to Harry in BR (along with Krakatoa and Tunguska).

Edit: Krakatoa was 1883. So I guess either he pretty much used the Blackstaff immediately upon taking it up to cause the eruption (and it's within the margin of error to Jim's ca. 1884-85 answer), or the eruption broke both the laws on time travel and collateral damage of mortal lives.

Yeah,  New Madrid happened somewhere between 1811 -1812
Title: Re: A Fistful of Warlocks (SPOILERS: FISTFUL OF WARLOCKS)
Post by: Snark Knight on July 05, 2017, 09:38:22 PM
I have a theory that the Blackstaff can removed ALL black magic taint from it's user.  Even taint that was gained prior to the Blackstaff's acquisition.
Therefore, it's possible that Eb did some horrendeous things before acquiring the BS, and the BS cleaned him up aftwards.

I'm not sure I buy that Eb was walking around with the taint of having caused hundreds of deaths on him for eighty-odd years between New Madrid and gaining the Blackstaff, apparently as captain of the Wardens for a chunk of that time, and nobody would have noticed something wrong with him.

Although given the WOJ that the Blackstaff chooses his or her own successor, it's possible they'd be heavily biased in favour of one of their own apprentices as the person best trusted to use it responsibly. I wonder if the collection of journals is not just a chain of masters and apprentices, but Blackstaffs and their chosen successors? In that case, New Madrid might have been an act of Ebenezar's predecessor, or the predecessor loaned a trusted apprentice the artifact for one-time use for some compelling reason.
Title: Re: A Fistful of Warlocks (SPOILERS: FISTFUL OF WARLOCKS)
Post by: ethical crackpot on July 05, 2017, 11:12:37 PM
I'm a big fan of weird west, particularly Deadlands. I had no idea this was coming out! So glad I started lurking here when I started reading the series a 2nd time!
Title: Re: A Fistful of Warlocks (SPOILERS: FISTFUL OF WARLOCKS)
Post by: Aminar on July 06, 2017, 12:05:31 AM
I've never spent a lot of time reading up on the Wild West, so when I beta'd the story, I looked up information on Earp and Dodge City, and landed on the "Dodge City War (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dodge_City_War)" as the timing for the short story, since it pretty closely resembles Earp's description of the tensions in the city/saloon.  Hence my estimate of the timing between the two events.
It looks like some of the history is fudged. Jim changed Luke Short's name to Bill Short if that's right. While the story seems to match up with the one I saw.
Title: Re: A Fistful of Warlocks (SPOILERS: FISTFUL OF WARLOCKS)
Post by: kazimmoinuddin on July 06, 2017, 03:10:17 AM
There is a tv show and comic about wynnonna Earp, descendant of Wyatt Earp. It would be cool if we saw a cross over at some point.

Say someone succeeds in some kind of dark Ascension ritual, what would happen if the staff then consumed the corruption? Would it restore their mortality or something.
Title: Re: A Fistful of Warlocks (SPOILERS: FISTFUL OF WARLOCKS)
Post by: Magnus on July 06, 2017, 10:31:14 AM
(click to show/hide)

The above passage I found interesting when reading the story.

(click to show/hide)
Title: Re: A Fistful of Warlocks (SPOILERS: FISTFUL OF WARLOCKS)
Post by: Zaphodess on July 06, 2017, 10:55:35 AM
I was wondering about this too. Is it possible that Ana has a somewhat more relaxed attitude towards the 1st law?
Title: Re: A Fistful of Warlocks (SPOILERS: FISTFUL OF WARLOCKS)
Post by: jonas on July 06, 2017, 11:31:57 AM
Supposedly laid down by Merlin weren't they? Technicality, fire started with magic burns without magical interference, so perhaps she didn't consider collateral from an ongoing fire part of the 1st law? Like drowning someone by immobilizing them for instance? 'I put you in a burning building, but I didn't kill you!'
Title: Re: A Fistful of Warlocks (SPOILERS: FISTFUL OF WARLOCKS)
Post by: knnn on July 06, 2017, 11:59:13 AM
Wait, were we just assuming he'd done New Madrid all along? Somehow I'd got the impression it was one of the ones he admitted to Harry in BR (along with Krakatoa and Tunguska).

It was:

Quote from: Blood Rites
"Casaverde," Ebenezar said, his voice shaking.   "Tunguska.   New Madrid.   Krakatoa.   A dozen more.   God help me, a dozen more at least."

Either Ebenezar got the Blackstaff "on loan" before actually taking it up, it's time-shenanigans, a different New Madrid incident, or just a Jim slip.
Title: Re: A Fistful of Warlocks (SPOILERS: FISTFUL OF WARLOCKS)
Post by: Rykel22 on July 06, 2017, 12:05:38 PM
Supposedly laid down by Merlin weren't they? Technicality, fire started with magic burns without magical interference, so perhaps she didn't consider collateral from an ongoing fire part of the 1st law? Like drowning someone by immobilizing them for instance? 'I put you in a burning building, but I didn't kill you!'
But hasn't it been stated that if someone uses a blast of wind or force to knock someone back, and they fall off a roof, it's still a violation of the 1st Law?
Title: Re: A Fistful of Warlocks (SPOILERS: FISTFUL OF WARLOCKS)
Post by: jonas on July 06, 2017, 12:15:48 PM
It was:

Either Ebenezar got the Blackstaff "on loan" before actually taking it up, it's time-shenanigans, a different New Madrid incident, or just a Jim slip.
I think I like the idea he did New Madrid on his own. I've started to connect the blackstaff with things falling to the planet(the classic 'calamity from the skies' trope like in FF7) but New Madrid was one that just didn't add up, being an earthquake. If he didn't yet have the blackstaff though? That should allow it keep to the theme of dropping things from offworld as it's big finisher.
Title: Re: A Fistful of Warlocks (SPOILERS: FISTFUL OF WARLOCKS)
Post by: Zaphodess on July 06, 2017, 12:55:31 PM
or just a Jim slip.
There are no Jim slips. It is our sacred duty to come up with a good explanation for those.  :P

I like the idea that he did New Madrid on his own. An earth spell gone badly wrong...

And I kind of like the idea too that Wardens have a very grey area approach to killing with magic when the recipient deserves it.
Title: Re: A Fistful of Warlocks (SPOILERS: FISTFUL OF WARLOCKS)
Post by: Snark Knight on July 06, 2017, 12:59:18 PM
I've started to connect the blackstaff with things falling to the planet(the classic 'calamity from the skies' trope like in FF7) but New Madrid was one that just didn't add up, being an earthquake.

Krakatoa was a big volcano, so really only Casaverde and Tunguska were "bomb it from orbit" type events.
Title: Re: A Fistful of Warlocks (SPOILERS: FISTFUL OF WARLOCKS)
Post by: jonas on July 06, 2017, 01:32:59 PM
Krakatoa was a big volcano, so really only Casaverde and Tunguska were "bomb it from orbit" type events.
Mmm, I thought there was at least one more?
Title: Re: A Fistful of Warlocks (SPOILERS: FISTFUL OF WARLOCKS)
Post by: Seidmadr on July 06, 2017, 02:42:43 PM
Hmm. By the turn of the Century, McCoy doesn't seem to be a Warden any more, according to the letters he and Pietrovitch wrote to each other.
In 1889 McCoy says that Pietrovich isn't under investigation, and in 1902 he says that he isn't speaking in official capacity. But that might be Blackstaff McCoy speaking, and not Warden McCoy.
But there are absolutely no mentions of him being Captain McCoy, which I feel would be relevant.

So it seems to me McCoy laid down the cloak and picked up the staff as part of the same general event.
Title: Re: A Fistful of Warlocks (SPOILERS: FISTFUL OF WARLOCKS)
Post by: knnn on July 06, 2017, 03:32:28 PM
So it seems to me McCoy laid down the cloak and picked up the staff as part of the same general event.

Well Krakatoa was really big and is around the time Jim said Ebenezer first picked up the Blackstaff.   It's not impossible that the previous Blackstaff died during the event and that Ebenezer's first act upon picking up the Blackstaff (in desperation?) was causing the boom in a last ditch effort to stop whatever it was.
Title: Re: A Fistful of Warlocks (SPOILERS: FISTFUL OF WARLOCKS)
Post by: Snark Knight on July 06, 2017, 04:17:14 PM
Well Krakatoa was really big and is around the time Jim said Ebenezer first picked up the Blackstaff.   It's not impossible that the previous Blackstaff died during the event and that Ebenezer's first act upon picking up the Blackstaff (in desperation?) was causing the boom in a last ditch effort to stop whatever it was.

From reading about the actual disaster though, there were seismic warning signs ahead of the eruption. It wasn't extremely sudden.
Title: Re: A Fistful of Warlocks (SPOILERS: FISTFUL OF WARLOCKS)
Post by: Rasins on July 06, 2017, 04:20:48 PM
I have not read the story yet.

That being said, does it mention Hogs Hollow?  Is it possible that this trip to the West is when Eb discovered where he ends up settling down on his farm?
Title: Re: A Fistful of Warlocks (SPOILERS: FISTFUL OF WARLOCKS)
Post by: Snark Knight on July 06, 2017, 04:27:47 PM
I have not read the story yet.
That being said, does it mention Hogs Hollow?  Is it possible that this trip to the West is when Eb discovered where he ends up settling down on his farm?

He doesn't appear directly. Luccio just alludes to him being the current Captain at the time and some of his warlock-hunting exploits.
Title: Re: A Fistful of Warlocks (SPOILERS: FISTFUL OF WARLOCKS)
Post by: Serack on July 06, 2017, 04:31:58 PM
Hmm. By the turn of the Century, McCoy doesn't seem to be a Warden any more, according to the letters he and Pietrovitch wrote to each other.
In 1889 McCoy says that Pietrovich isn't under investigation, and in 1902 he says that he isn't speaking in official capacity. But that might be Blackstaff McCoy speaking, and not Warden McCoy.
But there are absolutely no mentions of him being Captain McCoy, which I feel would be relevant.

So it seems to me McCoy laid down the cloak and picked up the staff as part of the same general event.

I feel like I'm missing something here, and I didn't know that was even possible unless possibly it's from one of the graphic novels...
Title: Re: A Fistful of Warlocks (SPOILERS: FISTFUL OF WARLOCKS)
Post by: Firnatine34 on July 06, 2017, 04:35:36 PM
I dug it. It's a little predictable (No more than you'd expect from a prequel story.)  Luccio is a bad ass, I always love getting another creature featured, and the idea of her very famous team up buddy being a venator was pretty cool.

A hell of a story for a mere 50 pages. I want to see more of her opposition. We didn't get to see him use his magic. The ending says there's more story to tell.

Here's hoping for A Few Warlocks More...
Title: Re: A Fistful of Warlocks (SPOILERS: FISTFUL OF WARLOCKS)
Post by: knnn on July 06, 2017, 05:45:41 PM
I feel like I'm missing something here, and I didn't know that was even possible unless possibly it's from one of the graphic novels...

It's from the supplement to the DFRPG.   There's a whole section on the Russian Revolution and Simon Pietrovich.   A nice chuck of it is correspondence between Simon and Ebenezer (who is the Blackstaff).   The latter is warning him not to use magic to help the Tsar.


Title: Re: A Fistful of Warlocks (SPOILERS: FISTFUL OF WARLOCKS)
Post by: LordDresden2 on July 06, 2017, 06:31:28 PM
But hasn't it been stated that if someone uses a blast of wind or force to knock someone back, and they fall off a roof, it's still a violation of the 1st Law?

Honestly?  It depends on who does it, why he did it, and the details.  The Council will make distinctions in the grey areas.  For ex, if a junior Wizard used magic to immobilize someone and then shot them while immobilized, and he couldn't shoot them any other way, yeah, Langtry would call for his death...unless it was clear that catastrophe was prevented, say.

But the Council did pretty much exactly that to Kemmler.  They rendered him physically helpless and held him that way using magic, then used mundane weapons to kill him, thus avoiding a direct First Law violation.

I would imagine the Wardens get a lot more leeway on that than most Wizards.
Title: Re: A Fistful of Warlocks (SPOILERS: FISTFUL OF WARLOCKS)
Post by: Rasins on July 06, 2017, 06:37:14 PM
Let's look at a similar situation.

Harry walks in and uses his little candle lighting spell to light a bunch of candles.

Then, one gets knocked over.

The place burns down and kill some mortals.

Harry is TECHNICALLY guilty of murder, but there would be no council, or cosmic consequences.
Title: Re: A Fistful of Warlocks (SPOILERS: FISTFUL OF WARLOCKS)
Post by: Snark Knight on July 06, 2017, 06:38:07 PM
I dug it. It's a little predictable (No more than you'd expect from a prequel story.)  Luccio is a bad ass, I always love getting another creature featured

The idea of using something as a horse that's, mythologically speaking, a close cousin to Jenny Greenteeth was just ... disturbing...
Title: Re: A Fistful of Warlocks (SPOILERS: FISTFUL OF WARLOCKS)
Post by: Seidmadr on July 06, 2017, 10:02:38 PM
The idea of using something as a horse that's, mythologically speaking, a close cousin to Jenny Greenteeth was just ... disturbing...

I'm just disappointed she didn't bribe it with hard liquor. That's the traditional way to make a deal with them.
Can give you the ability to become a supernaturally good fiddler.
Title: Re: A Fistful of Warlocks (SPOILERS: FISTFUL OF WARLOCKS)
Post by: Aminar on July 07, 2017, 02:20:29 PM
Let's look at a similar situation.

Harry walks in and uses his little candle lighting spell to light a bunch of candles.

Then, one gets knocked over.

The place burns down and kill some mortals.

Harry is TECHNICALLY guilty of murder, but there would be no council, or cosmic consequences.
I find that ridiculous and unlikely. There comes a point where the magical fire becomes the same as regular fire. At the same time if Little Chicago exploded while Harry was gone and his landlady died I'd see that as a violation due to the increased negligence involved. But it sounds more like the ward issue(both do.)
Title: Re: A Fistful of Warlocks (SPOILERS: FISTFUL OF WARLOCKS)
Post by: Rasins on July 07, 2017, 04:56:37 PM
Yet Jim said that the candle situation would count.

SHECKY - can you find the WoJ on this? - thanks.
Title: Re: A Fistful of Warlocks (SPOILERS: FISTFUL OF WARLOCKS)
Post by: Anubissama on July 07, 2017, 05:28:19 PM
First impressions after reading it:

I liked it, I prefer a logical and reasonable protagonist, so Luccio's POV was a nice change compared to Dresden. Overall it was as enjoyable as one can expect from a short story, and I hope we will get "For A Few Warlocks More" soon enough.

I'd have liked to see a bit more talk from Kemmler, he seemed like a nice guy.

Now on to observations and problems:

- Anyone else notices that the pentagram the Necromancers were using was of the same design Nicodemus used in "Small Favour"? Is it just coincident? It might be just the go to pentagram for Warlocks, or maybe it is hinting at a connection?

- I see many people have a problem with Luccio considering burning down the place, I don't really agree.

First off it would probably fall under not breaking the Law since once summoned fire is fire, so it would be vanilla arson that killed people not Law braking here.

Besides Luccio had a good take on the Warlocks position (upstairs) and where the rest of the people are (downstairs) so evacuating them and avoiding causalities was possible IMO, also I think it is implied that the Wardens have a certain immunity when fulfilling their duties, they definitely don't get beheaded if a Warlock dies resisting arrest.

- Oh my god! Magical Glasses! I have been saying for years Dresden should get something like that

- It honestly feels a bit unrealistic that a vanilla sheriff can shoot down a 40+ sized horde of the Undead, especially with Wild West era weapons, those things weren't known for range and precision. Did they had even rifling back then?

- While I understand sending the bulk of you forces to the Sherif Office it feels unrealistic that Grevane wouldn't keep a few undead on the roof

- It is also odd that an experienced Wizard like Kemmler would leave blood and skin on his bonds when escaping, a quick fire spell to burn the ropes was too much of a hassle? Feels like an obvious trap.

Title: Re: A Fistful of Warlocks (SPOILERS: FISTFUL OF WARLOCKS)
Post by: Mira on July 07, 2017, 05:46:13 PM


Just a WAG, but ...... Possible identities..
Quote
Grevane is Kemmler's disciple, he is at first called the "British Guy" in the story.  So who is this guy?  He escaped with Kemmler,  what happened to him?  We know what happened to Kemmler eventually, but not Grevane..  The first thought that came into my head is he might be the person/creature with the British accent napping in crystal that Harry was talking to on Demonreach in Skin Game..  The other possibility and a very strong one at that, is he is Cowl..  Disciple of Kemmler, his apprentice you might say, it fits very well. 
Title: Re: A Fistful of Warlocks (SPOILERS: FISTFUL OF WARLOCKS)
Post by: knnn on July 07, 2017, 07:17:37 PM
Grevane is one of the (non-Cowl) necromancers that Harry faces in Dead Beat.   IIRC , Ramirez shoots him.
Title: Re: A Fistful of Warlocks (SPOILERS: FISTFUL OF WARLOCKS)
Post by: Mira on July 07, 2017, 08:37:36 PM
Grevane is one of the (non-Cowl) necromancers that Harry faces in Dead Beat.   IIRC , Ramirez shoots him.

You're right, my bad.... :(
Title: Re: A Fistful of Warlocks (SPOILERS: FISTFUL OF WARLOCKS)
Post by: Snark Knight on July 08, 2017, 03:39:16 AM
Besides Luccio had a good take on the Warlocks position (upstairs) and where the rest of the people are (downstairs) so evacuating them and avoiding causalities was possible IMO, also I think it is implied that the Wardens have a certain immunity when fulfilling their duties, they definitely don't get beheaded if a Warlock dies resisting arrest.

For one thing, I don't think she was anywhere near confident that there was nobody else out of sight on the second floor.
Title: Re: A Fistful of Warlocks (SPOILERS: FISTFUL OF WARLOCKS)
Post by: Anubissama on July 08, 2017, 06:39:42 AM
Grevane is one of the (non-Cowl) necromancers that Harry faces in Dead Beat.   IIRC, Ramirez shoots him.

Ramirez beheads him. Samurai Master style, the cut doesn't make his head fall off, and Grevane is so crazy at this point that he tries to continue to fight because he believes death can't touch him.

Turn out believe isn't everything in the Dresdenverse.
Title: Re: A Fistful of Warlocks (SPOILERS: FISTFUL OF WARLOCKS)
Post by: jonas on July 08, 2017, 07:18:40 AM
Ramirez beheads him. Samurai Master style, the cut doesn't make his head fall off, and Grevane is so crazy at this point that he tries to continue to fight because he believes death can't touch him.

Turn out believe isn't everything in the Dresdenverse.
ROFL! I thought he just severed the flesh, not the severed the whole neck?
Title: Re: A Fistful of Warlocks (SPOILERS: FISTFUL OF WARLOCKS)
Post by: Zaphodess on July 08, 2017, 08:00:24 AM
- It is also odd that an experienced Wizard like Kemmler would leave blood and skin on his bonds when escaping, a quick fire spell to burn the ropes was too much of a hassle? Feels like an obvious trap.
Well, we didn't see what happened next. ;)

I think Dodge City was already a trap to catch a Warden. Kemmler was expecting one, though he said not until a week later or so.

Another interesting thing was that Luccio said the zombies weren't very high quality. This indicates that Grevane was still new in the business of Necromancy. Or that the group felt confident enough to use the incident as a training experience for one of the new recruits.
Title: Re: A Fistful of Warlocks (SPOILERS: FISTFUL OF WARLOCKS)
Post by: Ulfgeir on July 08, 2017, 01:15:09 PM
- It honestly feels a bit unrealistic that a vanilla sheriff can shoot down a 40+ sized horde of the Undead, especially with Wild West era weapons, those things weren't known for range and precision. Did they had even rifling back then?

Accoding to wikipedia (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rifling) they did. Might not be common though.

/Ulfgeir
Title: Re: A Fistful of Warlocks (SPOILERS: FISTFUL OF WARLOCKS)
Post by: peregrine on July 08, 2017, 02:34:12 PM
They had rifling in the 1700s.  I can't think of any Wild West era guns that weren't rifled.  Except for shotguns, of course.  Handguns especially were rifled because it's easier to do on a shorter barrel.
Title: Re: A Fistful of Warlocks (SPOILERS: FISTFUL OF WARLOCKS)
Post by: Anubissama on July 08, 2017, 06:19:55 PM
Another interesting thing was that Luccio said the zombies weren't very high quality. This indicates that Grevane was still new in the business of Necromancy. Or that the group felt confident enough to use the incident as a training experience for one of the new recruits.

First I thought that it was Page (as the new recruit) that is doing the summoning but he is just the drummer. Later in the fight, Grevane redirects some zombies to the roof to attack her,  so he was the summoner.

I guess he wanted to be able to throw some evocation around as well if needed? Since in Dead Beat, he summons full powered Zombies and it takes up to much of his energy that he can only attack with mundane weapons besides that.

They had rifling in the 1700s.  I can't think of any Wild West era guns that weren't rifled.  Except for shotguns, of course.  Handguns especially were rifled because it's easier to do on a shorter barrel.

Okay, still feels unrealistic that a Vanilla Sheriff mowed down a 40+ hoard of zombies, especially when for a good part of it, he was out on the street and the hoard was reportedly approaching from both sides, at some point he should have been surrounded. Feels to nice of an ending simply, no one got hurt, and Luccio has a hot trail to pursue Kemmler (although that one is probably a trap).

This story gives Necromancers a bad rap!
Title: Re: A Fistful of Warlocks (SPOILERS: FISTFUL OF WARLOCKS)
Post by: jonas on July 08, 2017, 09:28:45 PM
Do we know for sure the sheriff was vanilla and not a trained 'gunslinger' waiting on the dark tower come'th, lol? I've not read it, but simply your description of that event reminded me of a particular scene... and I"ve found when the description fits but the details are changed, amalgamation time! Both from elements within his story and his homages to pretty much every good story ever. Two of my favorites are
(click to show/hide)

*if you know of a scene adapted to the DF, does that make it a pop culture reference for the list ??? ?
Title: Re: A Fistful of Warlocks (SPOILERS: FISTFUL OF WARLOCKS)
Post by: Anubissama on July 09, 2017, 10:41:29 AM
He says he is a vanilla mortal. The only supernatural about him is that he is a Venatori, so he knows of the supernatural but is not part of it.

He had some Wards on the cell but either someone else did them for him or they were ritualistic in nature, still, the only thing they did was detect magic use and make a sound, so something probably any Vanilla can do with the right knowledge. He later confirms that he can't do anything against spells aimed at him, so he is just a knowledgeable Vanilla.

Something else I find interesting:
(click to show/hide)

Seems odd to me that the White Council allows open opposition to them, even by lightweights. Luccio says that the Thule Gesellschaft has Sorceress in them later on, so they would fall under the authority of the Council. In the supernatural world of politics, aperance is a big thing (even more so than in the vanilla world), allowing some would-be-sorcerers to be in opposition, even if they don't break the Laws feels unrealistic.
Title: Re: A Fistful of Warlocks (SPOILERS: FISTFUL OF WARLOCKS)
Post by: Arjan on July 09, 2017, 11:49:40 AM
He says he is a vanilla mortal. The only supernatural about him is that he is a Venatori, so he knows of the supernatural but is not part of it.

He had some Wards on the cell but either someone else did them for him or they were ritualistic in nature, still, the only thing they did was detect magic use and make a sound, so something probably any Vanilla can do with the right knowledge. He later confirms that he can't do anything against spells aimed at him, so he is just a knowledgeable Vanilla.

Something else I find interesting:
(click to show/hide)

Seems odd to me that the White Council allows open opposition to them, even by lightweights. Luccio says that the Thule Gesellschaft has Sorceress in them later on, so they would fall under the authority of the Council. In the supernatural world of politics, aperance is a big thing (even more so than in the vanilla world), allowing some would-be-sorcerers to be in opposition, even if they don't break the Laws feels unrealistic.
It was a secret society so their survival depended on how seriously the white council took them and how good they were at secrecy. The world is a big place and it is not like the white council had a lot of wardens running around, sending only one warden without backup into the unknown is not something a police force would normally do.

The white council is the all powerful omnipresent killer of kids but if you are a reasonably strong warlock and you know what you are doing you can hide from them for decades or even centuries.


Title: Re: A Fistful of Warlocks (SPOILERS: FISTFUL OF WARLOCKS)
Post by: Desden on July 09, 2017, 05:21:55 PM
Let's look at a similar situation.

Harry walks in and uses his little candle lighting spell to light a bunch of candles.

Then, one gets knocked over.

The place burns down and kill some mortals.

Harry is TECHNICALLY guilty of murder, but there would be no council, or cosmic consequences.

I think  it's more about the letter of the law and the way the magic is applied. If I cast fire on your face I have to believe in it and my right to do so for it to work, and thus I have killed with magic and broken the first rule.
If I cast fire on a candle and then use said candle to burn your bed I have broken no law of magic. I simply lit a candle. The rest was physics.
Moral I'm still guilty. Same as stabing someone through the neck with a sword. But by the law I'm clear
Title: Re: A Fistful of Warlocks (SPOILERS: FISTFUL OF WARLOCKS)
Post by: LordDresden2 on July 10, 2017, 04:09:31 AM
I think  it's more about the letter of the law and the way the magic is applied. If I cast fire on your face I have to believe in it and my right to do so for it to work, and thus I have killed with magic and broken the first rule.
If I cast fire on a candle and then use said candle to burn your bed I have broken no law of magic. I simply lit a candle. The rest was physics.
Moral I'm still guilty. Same as stabing someone through the neck with a sword. But by the law I'm clear

You're safe from the Laws of Magic.  But in that case, it wouldn't shock me a bit if the Wardens sent some anonymous mail to the local mundane authorities, either, if you're weak enough that they could handle you.

If you're too powerful for that, the Council might also decide that the 'grey area' just shrank in your case, too.  I suspect that's one of the reasons there is a grey area.
Title: Re: A Fistful of Warlocks (SPOILERS: FISTFUL OF WARLOCKS)
Post by: Gman on July 10, 2017, 04:36:30 AM
First impressions after reading it:

I liked it, I prefer a logical and reasonable protagonist, so Luccio's POV was a nice change compared to Dresden. Overall it was as enjoyable as one can expect from a short story, and I hope we will get "For A Few Warlocks More" soon enough.

I'd have liked to see a bit more talk from Kemmler, he seemed like a nice guy.

Now on to observations and problems:

- Anyone else notices that the pentagram the Necromancers were using was of the same design Nicodemus used in "Small Favour"? Is it just coincident? It might be just the go to pentagram for Warlocks, or maybe it is hinting at a connection?

- I see many people have a problem with Luccio considering burning down the place, I don't really agree.

First off it would probably fall under not breaking the Law since once summoned fire is fire, so it would be vanilla arson that killed people not Law braking here.

Besides Luccio had a good take on the Warlocks position (upstairs) and where the rest of the people are (downstairs) so evacuating them and avoiding causalities was possible IMO, also I think it is implied that the Wardens have a certain immunity when fulfilling their duties, they definitely don't get beheaded if a Warlock dies resisting arrest.

- Oh my god! Magical Glasses! I have been saying for years Dresden should get something like that

- It honestly feels a bit unrealistic that a vanilla sheriff can shoot down a 40+ sized horde of the Undead, especially with Wild West era weapons, those things weren't known for range and precision. Did they had even rifling back then?

- While I understand sending the bulk of you forces to the Sherif Office it feels unrealistic that Grevane wouldn't keep a few undead on the roof

- It is also odd that an experienced Wizard like Kemmler would leave blood and skin on his bonds when escaping, a quick fire spell to burn the ropes was too much of a hassle? Feels like an obvious trap.

He was a clued in Sheriff Named Wyatt Earp. A man known for how to shoot and where to hit the target (the head) since he was clued in. He probably had 2 pistols (12 rounds). He probably can shoot rapidly and slowly retreat and reload as the low quality zombies attacked. A decent marksman could shoot 12 rounds in 30 seconds or less and reload both pistols in less than a minute. It's possible.
Title: Re: A Fistful of Warlocks (SPOILERS: FISTFUL OF WARLOCKS)
Post by: peregrine on July 10, 2017, 04:37:36 AM
I think  it's more about the letter of the law and the way the magic is applied. If I cast fire on your face I have to believe in it and my right to do so for it to work, and thus I have killed with magic and broken the first rule.
If I cast fire on a candle and then use said candle to burn your bed I have broken no law of magic. I simply lit a candle. The rest was physics.
Moral I'm still guilty. Same as stabing someone through the neck with a sword. But by the law I'm clear
If you use a gust of wind to blow someone off a roof, you're guilty under the Law (and tainted metaphysically), even though technically it's the gravity doing the killing.
Title: Re: A Fistful of Warlocks (SPOILERS: FISTFUL OF WARLOCKS)
Post by: Desden on July 10, 2017, 05:21:26 AM
Exactly. But I'd you use wind to blow sand into someone's eyes causing them the trip off the roof that's fair game
Title: Re: A Fistful of Warlocks (SPOILERS: FISTFUL OF WARLOCKS)
Post by: Aminar on July 10, 2017, 01:46:45 PM
First I thought that it was Page (as the new recruit) that is doing the summoning but he is just the drummer. Later in the fight, Grevane redirects some zombies to the roof to attack her,  so he was the summoner.

I guess he wanted to be able to throw some evocation around as well if needed? Since in Dead Beat, he summons full powered Zombies and it takes up to much of his energy that he can only attack with mundane weapons besides that.

Okay, still feels unrealistic that a Vanilla Sheriff mowed down a 40+ hoard of zombies, especially when for a good part of it, he was out on the street and the hoard was reportedly approaching from both sides, at some point he should have been surrounded. Feels to nice of an ending simply, no one got hurt, and Luccio has a hot trail to pursue Kemmler (although that one is probably a trap).

This story gives Necromancers a bad rap!
What you're missing is that this is Wyatt Earp. Wyatt Earp.  He's a literal legend. Documentaries are made about him. He's taught about in American schools. Having him be anything other than strictly epic would ruin the cameo and feel off to anyone with enough knowledge of both American History and Alt-history genre savvy. So no, it doesn't give necromancers a bad name. It holds true to the legends of the source material in the same way making Odin terrifyingly powerful does.
Title: Re: A Fistful of Warlocks (SPOILERS: FISTFUL OF WARLOCKS)
Post by: Anubissama on July 10, 2017, 02:51:27 PM
Isn't that mostly due to Stuart Lake's heavily fictionalised "biography" of Earp?

In reality, he was an occasional law enforcer and gambler who was accused of murder after the O.K. Corral shootout and got off because he hired a famous defence attorney. Doesn't really scream "zombie killer" material to me.
Title: Re: A Fistful of Warlocks (SPOILERS: FISTFUL OF WARLOCKS)
Post by: jonas on July 10, 2017, 03:41:48 PM
What you're missing is that this is Wyatt Earp. Wyatt Earp.  He's a literal legend. Documentaries are made about him. He's taught about in American schools. Having him be anything other than strictly epic would ruin the cameo and feel off to anyone with enough knowledge of both American History and Alt-history genre savvy. So no, it doesn't give necromancers a bad name. It holds true to the legends of the source material in the same way making Odin terrifyingly powerful does.
Yep, missing that. He's the inspiration for pretty much any badass gunslinger to come after.
Title: Re: A Fistful of Warlocks (SPOILERS: FISTFUL OF WARLOCKS)
Post by: Rasins on July 10, 2017, 04:21:24 PM
Yep, missing that. He's the inspiration for pretty much any badass gunslinger to come after.

Well, except for the man with no name, that is.  :D
Title: Re: A Fistful of Warlocks (SPOILERS: FISTFUL OF WARLOCKS)
Post by: jonas on July 10, 2017, 05:21:06 PM
Well, except for the man with no name, that is.  :D
He is the man with no name, he just stopped using one so he wouldn't grow a huge mantle around it ;) see Marty Robins, Big Iron.
Title: Re: A Fistful of Warlocks (SPOILERS: FISTFUL OF WARLOCKS)
Post by: wyltok on July 10, 2017, 09:24:51 PM
The idea of using something as a horse that's, mythologically speaking, a close cousin to Jenny Greenteeth was just ... disturbing...

Not just Jenny Greenteeth, but Lily as well, who's half-nixie, per Summer Knight.

The only thing I'm sad about regarding this story was that I was hoping to find out why sheriff badges are five-pointed stars inside a circle (http://www.jimbutcheronline.com/bb/index.php/topic,15416.msg727864.html#msg727864).
Title: Re: A Fistful of Warlocks (SPOILERS: FISTFUL OF WARLOCKS)
Post by: peregrine on July 11, 2017, 03:01:11 AM
The only thing I'm sad about regarding this story was that I was hoping to find out why sheriff badges are five-pointed stars inside a circle (http://www.jimbutcheronline.com/bb/index.php/topic,15416.msg727864.html#msg727864).
Often they're not.  Sometimes they're 6 or 7 pointed stars, and often extend past the circle, rather than are confined within it.

Though apparently the older ones were kept within the circle mostly.
Title: Re: A Fistful of Warlocks (SPOILERS: FISTFUL OF WARLOCKS)
Post by: Dina on July 11, 2017, 04:16:06 AM
Ok, I've just read this story. I liked it more than expected (because I don't care too much for westerns or for Luccio). A few comments (SPOILERS!!!)

I think Luccio considered that setting the place on fire wouldn't be "killing by magic". That doesn't mean there is not a law against that.

About what you were discussing before about McCoy, perhaps he was the Blackstaff and the Captain at the same time, but Luccio didn't know he was the Blackstaff

I agree about how suspicious it it that Kemmler left her skin behind. It smells trap.

I wanted to see Karl set free, his work done. Also I believe he could have been used better.

No dying curses from the bad guys? It seems too convenient. Also I clearly remember Harry several times thinking that a bullet is very efficient against dying curses but that is a modern concept that most old wizards in the Council didn't gatther. Still, Luccio had it very clear in this story

I was angry "someone" saved her in the end. She had done a lot, she deserved to save herself.


Title: Re: A Fistful of Warlocks (SPOILERS: FISTFUL OF WARLOCKS)
Post by: Zaphodess on July 11, 2017, 10:18:34 AM
No dying curses from the bad guys? It seems too convenient. Also I clearly remember Harry several times thinking that a bullet is very efficient against dying curses but that is a modern concept that most old wizards in the Council didn't gatther. Still, Luccio had it very clear in this story.

Luccio isn't the usual crusty old wizard in the books either. She's very open-minded about modern technology. Her hobby is reading about computers, after all.

I think that might actually be the reason she made Captain in the first place. She wasn't particular about how the job got done, she did it.
Title: Re: A Fistful of Warlocks (SPOILERS: FISTFUL OF WARLOCKS)
Post by: Anubissama on July 11, 2017, 02:13:04 PM
Any thought on Luccio's sword? There are two quotes regarding it:

(click to show/hide)

And later during the fight:

(click to show/hide)

None of this quotes make it explicit if this is already the Enchantment Cutting Sword she will be making for all the Wardens later. The way it is used here, it could be a simple focus she uses to fight.

Anyway, it would suggest that either Luccio was an outliner as a Warden using a sword, which later gave here the idea to make the enchanted swords which all Wardens would carry.

Or there is a tradition of Warden using sword regardless if they are enchanted or not, which begs the question why didn't the new Baby Wardens and Harry got normal swords.
Title: Re: A Fistful of Warlocks (SPOILERS: FISTFUL OF WARLOCKS)
Post by: jonas on July 11, 2017, 02:42:38 PM
heh
(click to show/hide)
Title: Re: A Fistful of Warlocks (SPOILERS: FISTFUL OF WARLOCKS)
Post by: Zaphodess on July 11, 2017, 03:20:21 PM
Any thought on Luccio's sword? There are two quotes regarding it:

(click to show/hide)

And later during the fight:

(click to show/hide)

None of this quotes make it explicit if this is already the Enchantment Cutting Sword she will be making for all the Wardens later. The way it is used here, it could be a simple focus she uses to fight.

Anyway, it would suggest that either Luccio was an outliner as a Warden using a sword, which later gave here the idea to make the enchanted swords which all Wardens would carry.

Or there is a tradition of Warden using sword regardless if they are enchanted or not, which begs the question why didn't the new Baby Wardens and Harry got normal swords.

My guess would be that she had the idea to use a sword not just as a sword but also as a focus. Maybe other Wardens did so too, but we don't know if it was a tradition. Would make sense, because swords used to be common weapons that everyone carried, so why not use something you carry around anyway as an additional focus.

She just developed the technique so far that she was able to create the Warden swords later for all her colleagues. What we see in the story is an early version of those though, imo.
Title: Re: A Fistful of Warlocks (SPOILERS: FISTFUL OF WARLOCKS)
Post by: Dina on July 11, 2017, 05:34:44 PM
Luccio isn't the usual crusty old wizard in the books either. She's very open-minded about modern technology. Her hobby is reading about computers, after all.

I think that might actually be the reason she made Captain in the first place. She wasn't particular about how the job got done, she did it.

Absolutely, In fact, I was very happy to see such a modern girl, wearing special glasses, and guns (like Harry himself) and knowing about scientific ideas like nature of light.It's very consistent with the Luccio who reads about computers. I am hoping new young wizard Luccio can find a way to actually use a computer (I've been saying for years than wizards need to do a protective circle around a computer another person (not wizard) is using and then the wizard could read above his/her shoulcer, suggest things to do, things like that. Luccio may be able to find something better. For instance, use a desktop PC. Put a circle around the CPU amd another around the monitor. Lastly try to wear the oldest keyboard you can find. Another option is using a voice activated software. Your voice can cross the circle but your magic can´t)

I agree with your post about her sword.
Title: Re: A Fistful of Warlocks (SPOILERS: FISTFUL OF WARLOCKS)
Post by: Aminar on July 11, 2017, 05:51:33 PM
Isn't that mostly due to Stuart Lake's heavily fictionalised "biography" of Earp?

In reality, he was an occasional law enforcer and gambler who was accused of murder after the O.K. Corral shootout and got off because he hired a famous defence attorney. Doesn't really scream "zombie killer" material to me.
I said Legend for a reason. In Dresden legends are truth. Even more recent ones.
Title: Re: A Fistful of Warlocks (SPOILERS: FISTFUL OF WARLOCKS)
Post by: Snark Knight on July 11, 2017, 06:26:10 PM
Or there is a tradition of Warden using sword regardless if they are enchanted or not, which begs the question why didn't the new Baby Wardens and Harry got normal swords.

Harry already had several swords (his magnetism focus, and I believe a few  ordinary ones) before he got drafted.

Carlos and most of the younger cohort probably just don't think mundane swords would be worth carrying next to staffs and guns and grenades. When everybody else still carrying swords would have decades to centuries of experience over them anyway, it's hardly worth the trouble to carry around and conceal swords if they can't sever spells or be charged to cut through tree trunks and stuff.
Title: Re: A Fistful of Warlocks (SPOILERS: FISTFUL OF WARLOCKS)
Post by: Quantus on July 12, 2017, 06:33:47 PM
Harry already had several swords (his magnetism focus, and I believe a few  ordinary ones) before he got drafted.
He only had the earth-magic Cane sword of his own, unless you count the Swords in his keeping.  Murphy had a katana, and the Carpenters obviously are well-armed but those are the swordsfolk on the good-guy side. 

Oh, Hendricks has a Magic Sword these days, though no Idea what it does.
Title: Re: A Fistful of Warlocks (SPOILERS: FISTFUL OF WARLOCKS)
Post by: BigFire on July 13, 2017, 03:07:54 PM
Isn't that mostly due to Stuart Lake's heavily fictionalised "biography" of Earp?

In reality, he was an occasional law enforcer and gambler who was accused of murder after the O.K. Corral shootout and got off because he hired a famous defence attorney. Doesn't really scream "zombie killer" material to me.

He's also been in multiple gunfights and walked away from all of them without a scratch.  Literally immuned to bullet.
Title: Re: A Fistful of Warlocks (SPOILERS: FISTFUL OF WARLOCKS)
Post by: Snark Knight on July 13, 2017, 04:54:44 PM
He only had the earth-magic Cane sword of his own, unless you count the Swords in his keeping.

I thought there was a mention of camoflaging the holy swords in a bucket of mundane ones. Might have been props from his dad's stage magic rather than actual weapons though...
Title: Re: A Fistful of Warlocks (SPOILERS: FISTFUL OF WARLOCKS)
Post by: Aminar on July 13, 2017, 05:02:49 PM
I thought there was a mention of camoflaging the holy swords in a bucket of mundane ones. Might have been props from his dad's stage magic rather than actual weapons though...
I think it was an Umbrella stand. So with umbrellas, and Canes. And the like.
Title: Re: A Fistful of Warlocks (SPOILERS: FISTFUL OF WARLOCKS)
Post by: Dina on July 13, 2017, 05:27:38 PM
I think it was an Umbrella stand. So with umbrellas, and Canes. And the like.

Yep, I got the same idea
Title: Re: A Fistful of Warlocks (SPOILERS: FISTFUL OF WARLOCKS)
Post by: Quantus on July 13, 2017, 05:51:10 PM
Same.  And when asked if he'll ever get a sword, WOJ responses seem to be some variation of "Luccio cant make them anymore and Harry's more of a Gun Guy anyway." 

Title: Re: A Fistful of Warlocks (SPOILERS: FISTFUL OF WARLOCKS)
Post by: Anubissama on July 13, 2017, 06:01:06 PM
On the other hand, it has been what 8-10 years in-story since Luccio got body swap? (there was some odd time passage between Ghost Story-Cold Days)

She said she would be able to adjust her skills to her new body after some time. So I'm still hoping for a Warden Sword for Harry at some point.
Title: Re: A Fistful of Warlocks (SPOILERS: FISTFUL OF WARLOCKS)
Post by: jonas on July 13, 2017, 06:03:28 PM
I took it as the adjusting was hers to do mostly. As literally different bodies, different Engines of magic are good at different things. Not that you can't train better but I think she said her new body lacked potential to do so.
Title: Re: A Fistful of Warlocks (SPOILERS: FISTFUL OF WARLOCKS)
Post by: Anubissama on July 13, 2017, 06:27:40 PM
On the other hand, Capiorcorpus wasn't in a hurry when choosing that particular body.

So either that body has Wizard level talent, which means at some point Luccio can regain all her skills, just reskinned for the new body, or there are ways to deal with lower talented bodies if you are a Wizards soul with higher skills stuck in them.

And Luccio could discover those potentially too.
Title: Re: A Fistful of Warlocks (SPOILERS: FISTFUL OF WARLOCKS)
Post by: Quantus on July 13, 2017, 06:57:22 PM
On the other hand, Capiorcorpus wasn't in a hurry when choosing that particular body.

So either that body has Wizard level talent, which means at some point Luccio can regain all her skills, just reskinned for the new body, or there are ways to deal with lower talented bodies if you are a Wizards soul with higher skills stuck in them.

And Luccio could discover those potentially too.
Also possible that the necromantic abilities are less specific to innate talents, I suppose.  She hopped a few times in DB, but only to carefully chosen host (the prof and then the Grad student) or a known Council Wizard.  By GS she was far more desperate and so presumably far less picky. 
Title: Re: A Fistful of Warlocks (SPOILERS: FISTFUL OF WARLOCKS)
Post by: forumghost on July 13, 2017, 09:07:11 PM
On the other hand, Capiorcorpus wasn't in a hurry when choosing that particular body.

So either that body has Wizard level talent, which means at some point Luccio can regain all her skills, just reskinned for the new body, or there are ways to deal with lower talented bodies if you are a Wizards soul with higher skills stuck in them.

And Luccio could discover those potentially too.

Ghost Harry seemed able to pull his usual stunts in Molly's body without trouble. She even comments on it afterwards.

So it's likely just a matter of time and adjustment. Give her about a century to hit her stride again and Luccio should be okay. (That said, Corpsetaker seemed to think that the right body made a difference, so who knows?)
Title: Re: A Fistful of Warlocks (SPOILERS: FISTFUL OF WARLOCKS)
Post by: Arjan on July 14, 2017, 03:41:23 AM
He's also been in multiple gunfights and walked away from all of them without a scratch.  Literally immuned to bullet.
That only prooves he was a better killer not he was a better man. A bit of wiki reading leaves a lot of questions about the man.

But it is not about the real man, it is about the story that grew around him. The real men behind the stories are often disappointing.

Charlemagne was not a nice man.

Title: Re: A Fistful of Warlocks (SPOILERS: FISTFUL OF WARLOCKS)
Post by: LordDresden2 on July 14, 2017, 04:04:02 AM
I said Legend for a reason. In Dresden legends are truth. Even more recent ones.

This^^^.

Harry has noted several times over the course of the stories that 'conventional' mundane history is simply often wrong in the DV.  In Grave Peril, for ex, he notes to himself that the dark gods, evil spirits, vampires and monsters more-or-less ruled the world up until a few centuries earlier.  In another book he observes that the 'Grimm's Fairy Tales' were actually not so far off from the reality of the Middle Ages in some ways.

The 'cynical/realistic' take on history that is widely accepted in the real world today is simply not necessarily valid in the DV.  Sometimes, the myth is closer to the truth than the deconstruction of it.
Title: Re: A Fistful of Warlocks (SPOILERS: FISTFUL OF WARLOCKS)
Post by: LordDresden2 on July 14, 2017, 04:05:23 AM
I took it as the adjusting was hers to do mostly. As literally different bodies, different Engines of magic are good at different things. Not that you can't train better but I think she said her new body lacked potential to do so.

I think the issue is that magic is rooted in both the mind and the body.  Which means that different bodies will give different magical potentials even with the same soul.  It might be possible to compensate for that to a degree, but probably never completely.
Title: Re: A Fistful of Warlocks (SPOILERS: FISTFUL OF WARLOCKS)
Post by: LordDresden2 on July 14, 2017, 04:07:36 AM
That only prooves he was a better killer not he was a better man.

But in a combat situation, 'better killer' is often what you need.

Quote

 A bit of wiki reading leaves a lot of questions about the man.

But it is not about the real man, it is about the story that grew around him. The real men behind the stories are often disappointing.

Charlemagne was not a nice man.

Successful rulers and leaders often are not.  Sometimes you can't be both nice and successful in politics and war.  It's not hard to find examples in history of kings and rulers who were kind, decent...and ineffectual or worse.
Title: Re: A Fistful of Warlocks (SPOILERS: FISTFUL OF WARLOCKS)
Post by: jamescagney22 on July 14, 2017, 05:37:19 AM
But in a combat situation, 'better killer' is often what you need.

Successful rulers and leaders often are not.  Sometimes you can't be both nice and successful in politics and war.  It's not hard to find examples in history of kings and rulers who were kind, decent...and ineffectual or worse.

I believe that is why the moniker of "Great" is earned, Elizabeth, Catherine, Frederick, Alfred, etc.... but alas they are few and far between.
Title: Re: A Fistful of Warlocks (SPOILERS: FISTFUL OF WARLOCKS)
Post by: Arjan on July 14, 2017, 05:48:23 AM

I believe that is why the moniker of "Great" is earned, Elizabeth, Catherine, Frederick, Alfred, etc.... but alas they are few and far between.
Hitler, Stalin, Napoleon, Tamerlane, Charlemagne, Julius Caesar, ...

Genocidal maniacs all of them and more. Charlemagne has a myth that is far from his true personality as we know it from history.
Title: Re: A Fistful of Warlocks (SPOILERS: FISTFUL OF WARLOCKS)
Post by: Gman on July 14, 2017, 08:28:17 AM
He's also been in multiple gunfights and walked away from all of them without a scratch.  Literally immuned to bullet.

That is true. Some gunfights he had bullet holes in his clothes but they missed him. Wyatt Earp knew how to shoot and he had courage under fire.
Title: Re: A Fistful of Warlocks (SPOILERS: FISTFUL OF WARLOCKS)
Post by: wardenferry419 on July 14, 2017, 10:38:31 AM
Among other wizards, Harry has a legendary status for beating great powers. But, we, the readers, know how close his wins came to defeats. "When the legend becomes fact, print the legend."
Title: Re: A Fistful of Warlocks (SPOILERS: FISTFUL OF WARLOCKS)
Post by: Quantus on July 14, 2017, 12:20:50 PM

I believe that is why the moniker of "Great" is earned, Elizabeth, Catherine, Frederick, Alfred, etc.... but alas they are few and far between.
Well, fwiw, the difference between the moniker of "Great" vs "Terrible" is usually in the eye of the translator. 
Title: Re: A Fistful of Warlocks (SPOILERS: FISTFUL OF WARLOCKS)
Post by: forumghost on July 14, 2017, 02:31:33 PM
After all, He Who Must Not Be Named did great things - Terrible, yes, but great.
Title: Re: A Fistful of Warlocks (SPOILERS: FISTFUL OF WARLOCKS)
Post by: Aminar on July 14, 2017, 03:33:57 PM
After all, He Who Must Not Be Named did great things - Terrible, yes, but great.
Yes. Kemmler was in this story.
Title: Re: A Fistful of Warlocks (SPOILERS: FISTFUL OF WARLOCKS)
Post by: Snark Knight on July 14, 2017, 06:33:45 PM
Successful rulers and leaders often are not.  Sometimes you can't be both nice and successful in politics and war.  It's not hard to find examples in history of kings and rulers who were kind, decent...and ineffectual or worse.

In-universe, Nic even acknowledged at one point that Marcone would have been a successful ruler in times gone by.
Title: Re: A Fistful of Warlocks (SPOILERS: FISTFUL OF WARLOCKS)
Post by: Dina on July 14, 2017, 07:10:03 PM
I agree with that. In fact, he is a successful ruler in a way.
Title: Re: A Fistful of Warlocks (SPOILERS: FISTFUL OF WARLOCKS)
Post by: LordDresden2 on July 16, 2017, 04:31:43 AM
Hitler, Stalin, Napoleon, Tamerlane, Charlemagne, Julius Caesar, ...

Genocidal maniacs all of them and more. Charlemagne has a myth that is far from his true personality as we know it from history.

Um...no.  Those names don't go together.  None of them were necessarily nice, but putting Napolean and Caesar in the same category as Hitler and Stalin just doesn't work.
Title: Re: A Fistful of Warlocks (SPOILERS: FISTFUL OF WARLOCKS)
Post by: LordDresden2 on July 16, 2017, 04:33:58 AM
In-universe, Nic even acknowledged at one point that Marcone would have been a successful ruler in times gone by.

Not just successful.  By the standards of much of history, King John Marcone would be seen, and remembered, as exceptionally just, fair, and reasonable, not just competent.  Which is both a terrible truth of history and a peculiar commentary on Marcone.
Title: Re: A Fistful of Warlocks (SPOILERS: FISTFUL OF WARLOCKS)
Post by: Arjan on July 16, 2017, 06:57:01 AM
Um...no.  Those names don't go together.  None of them were necessarily nice, but putting Napolean and Caesar in the same category as Hitler and Stalin just doesn't work.
They all shared the same appreciation for human life.

http://www.ancient-origins.net/news-history-archaeology/150000-fled-their-lives-were-slaughtered-julius-caesar-army-bones-reveal-020659

This was not an accident. Roman warfare was brutal but Julius Caesar was new in the scale of his killings and invasions, he invaded Gaul for money and did not even need an excuse.

Of course he would not have started a holocaust, he would have thought it a waste of resources, romans were very practical. But mass slaughter of defenseless people? Happened a lot in his campaigns. Unprovoked attack on other peoples? He was all for it.

Caesar and Napoleon still have the myth around them and people who seriously ascribe to that myth.
Title: Re: A Fistful of Warlocks (SPOILERS: FISTFUL OF WARLOCKS)
Post by: forumghost on July 16, 2017, 08:21:24 AM
Atrocities were committed everywhere throughout history. When the First Crusade got to Jerusalem, they say the City ran ankle-deep in blood. Alexander the Great brutally marched his Army conquering everything in sight. The British slaughtered, divided and enslaved countless to build their Empire. The treatment of Native Americans by Settlers. Etc, Etc.

That's War. That's Empire. It's a terrible, evil thing. But Napoleon and Caesar (bastards though they are) aren't really comparable with the acts of Hitler and the Holocaust, or Stalin's purges.
Title: Re: A Fistful of Warlocks (SPOILERS: FISTFUL OF WARLOCKS)
Post by: Dina on July 16, 2017, 08:33:49 AM
What about atomic bombs? What is happening in Aleppo? And so many other examples.

Title: Re: A Fistful of Warlocks (SPOILERS: FISTFUL OF WARLOCKS)
Post by: Arjan on July 16, 2017, 10:03:20 AM
Atrocities were committed everywhere throughout history. When the First Crusade got to Jerusalem, they say the City ran ankle-deep in blood. Alexander the Great brutally marched his Army conquering everything in sight. The British slaughtered, divided and enslaved countless to build their Empire. The treatment of Native Americans by Settlers. Etc, Etc.
W
That's War. That's Empire. It's a terrible, evil thing. But Napoleon and Caesar (bastards though they are) aren't really comparable with the acts of Hitler and the Holocaust, or Stalin's purges.
Hitler and Stalin had modern technology, communication and organisation at their side. Unlike Rome however they lost and we do not have to listen to their mythology.

They were innovators and though their crimes were not new they were on a scale unheard of before their time.

Rome was similar. Everything they did was known before the romans came but they killed and enslaved on a scale and efficiency never heard of before. They were innovators too.

But I think I wandered away from my original argument here. They were all horrible people who did far more even than most people in their situation and even in their time would have done. The difference that was important for my argument is that some of them had build a mythology around them.

And that mythology still has power today over peoples mind.

https://mobile.nytimes.com/2016/03/13/opinion/sunday/stalinist-nostalgia-in-vladimir-putins-russia.html
Title: Re: A Fistful of Warlocks (SPOILERS: FISTFUL OF WARLOCKS)
Post by: Aminar on July 16, 2017, 01:44:44 PM
Hitler and Stalin had modern technology, communication and organisation at their side. Unlike Rome however they lost and we do not have to listen to their mythology.

They were innovators and though their crimes were not new they were on a scale unheard of before their time.

Rome was similar. Everything they did was known before the romans came but they killed and enslaved on a scale and efficiency never heard of before. They were innovators too.

But I think I wandered away from my original argument here. They were all horrible people who did far more even than most people in their situation and even in their time would have done. The difference that was important for my argument is that some of them had build a mythology around them.

And that mythology still has power today over peoples mind.

https://mobile.nytimes.com/2016/03/13/opinion/sunday/stalinist-nostalgia-in-vladimir-putins-russia.html
Remember, we see a difference between what a ruler does to others and what they do their own people still. Ceaser and Napoleon didn't commit genocide within their borders on nearly tbe scale Hitler and Stalin did.(Although I think at points Rome did.) That's the difference people see. And it's a tough difference to argue against. In the end I'm not sure the difference matters. But to our culture it does. But you're arguing the wrong thing.
Title: Re: A Fistful of Warlocks (SPOILERS: FISTFUL OF WARLOCKS)
Post by: Dina on July 16, 2017, 05:25:10 PM
Culture must be broken on me because I never thought that, not even once.
Title: Re: A Fistful of Warlocks (SPOILERS: FISTFUL OF WARLOCKS)
Post by: Aminar on July 16, 2017, 10:43:31 PM
Culture must be broken on me because I never thought that, not even once.
Absolutely.
Title: Re: A Fistful of Warlocks (SPOILERS: FISTFUL OF WARLOCKS)
Post by: LordDresden2 on July 17, 2017, 07:41:20 AM
Hitler and Stalin had modern technology, communication and organisation at their side. Unlike Rome however they lost and we do not have to listen to their mythology.

They were innovators and though their crimes were not new they were on a scale unheard of before their time.

Rome was similar. Everything they did was known before the romans came but they killed and enslaved on a scale and efficiency never heard of before. They were innovators too.

They also enforced peace over the Mediterranean World for four centuries, with occasional failures, but far more peace and prosperity than had been known in the previous centuries of the Hellenistic Age.  Yes, the Romans were ruthless, and sometimes brutal, but so were their rivals and enemies.  The Romans brought a rule of law and if they were slavers, they were also civilizers.  You can't readily divide up the good and the bad because they were all tangled together.

Napoleon, likewise, has little in common with Hitler or Stalin, or Pol Pot, or Mao, or their ilk.  Neither the Romans nor Napoleon made the error of thinking they could rewrite human nature, Hitler, Stalin, Pol Pot, etc. tried to do exactly that.

(Napoleon actually brought an end to that kind of thinking in the French Revolution.)
Title: Re: A Fistful of Warlocks (SPOILERS: FISTFUL OF WARLOCKS)
Post by: Arjan on July 17, 2017, 09:30:41 AM
They also enforced peace over the Mediterranean World for four centuries, with occasional failures, but far more peace and prosperity than had been known in the previous centuries of the Hellenistic Age.  Yes, the Romans were ruthless, and sometimes brutal, but so were their rivals and enemies.  The Romans brought a rule of law and if they were slavers, they were also civilizers.  You can't readily divide up the good and the bad because they were all tangled together.

Napoleon, likewise, has little in common with Hitler or Stalin, or Pol Pot, or Mao, or their ilk.  Neither the Romans nor Napoleon made the error of thinking they could rewrite human nature, Hitler, Stalin, Pol Pot, etc. tried to do exactly that.

(Napoleon actually brought an end to that kind of thinking in the French Revolution.)

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-1038453/The-French-Fuhrer-Genocidal-Napoleon-barbaric-Hitler-historian-claims.html


Title: Re: A Fistful of Warlocks (SPOILERS: FISTFUL OF WARLOCKS)
Post by: wardenferry419 on July 18, 2017, 09:20:31 AM
People kill people. Always have and always will. Those in charge of alot of people are able to kill alot of people. That is history, that is the present, and that will be the future.
Title: Re: A Fistful of Warlocks (SPOILERS: FISTFUL OF WARLOCKS)
Post by: Quantus on July 18, 2017, 12:32:13 PM
Sooo...what were we talking about?
Title: Re: A Fistful of Warlocks (SPOILERS: FISTFUL OF WARLOCKS)
Post by: Aminar on July 18, 2017, 02:02:06 PM
Sooo...what were we talking about?
Wyatt Earp's historical persona, Legend Vs Fact.
Title: Re: A Fistful of Warlocks (SPOILERS: FISTFUL OF WARLOCKS)
Post by: Arjan on July 18, 2017, 05:03:06 PM
Wyatt Earp's historical persona, Legend Vs Fact.
And more in general:

Humans making myths about historical persons
The differences between their real and mythical personality
Humans believing the myth, the power of myth in real life
What is true in the dresdenverse, the myth or the real version
Title: Re: A Fistful of Warlocks (SPOILERS: FISTFUL OF WARLOCKS)
Post by: Quantus on July 18, 2017, 06:40:12 PM
Ah, good.  Those are far better topics, safely clear of Godwin's Law :P
Title: Re: A Fistful of Warlocks (SPOILERS: FISTFUL OF WARLOCKS)
Post by: LordDresden2 on July 19, 2017, 04:46:02 AM
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-1038453/The-French-Fuhrer-Genocidal-Napoleon-barbaric-Hitler-historian-claims.html

The author of that needs to do a better job on his history.  He combines wartime deaths, rebellions, and a number of other things to produce a sensationalist (and mostly invalid) comparison.

Which is itself typical of the back-and-forth.  It's somewhat traditional for historical views of large figures to go back and forth from "he was a hero" to "he was a villain" and back again as fashions change.  The truth always remains stubbornly inconvenient, because it rarely fits into a given era's preferences.  Oliver Cromwell, Columbus, Shaka Zula, Abraham Lincoln, you name the figure.

Yes, even Lincoln.  For ex, was Lincoln trying to avoid war when he had Anderson fortify the island in Charleston Harbor...or was he intentionally dangling bait to goad the Confederates into firing first?  Depends on who you ask.  We can't find out because the Council would get all sword-happy if we traveled back to 1860 and read Lincoln's mind.

Ditto Earp.  How much of his legend is legend, how much is real, and how much of what we think is the reality is actually legend?  Impossible to say with certainty.
Title: Re: A Fistful of Warlocks (SPOILERS: FISTFUL OF WARLOCKS)
Post by: MarcelRED147 on September 21, 2017, 05:59:23 PM
Yes. Kemmler was in this story.

Kemmler is Grindelwald, surely. Sorry for necroposting, seemed fitting given the thread though.
Title: Re: A Fistful of Warlocks (SPOILERS: FISTFUL OF WARLOCKS)
Post by: groinkick on September 21, 2017, 07:04:58 PM
Was anyone else underwhelmed by Kemmler?  Did not seem very impressive, or formidable in the least.  Didn't set him apart from a run of the mill warlock.
Title: Re: A Fistful of Warlocks (SPOILERS: FISTFUL OF WARLOCKS)
Post by: Dina on September 21, 2017, 07:17:17 PM
The truth? No. I liked what I saw.
Title: Re: A Fistful of Warlocks (SPOILERS: FISTFUL OF WARLOCKS)
Post by: dillic1 on September 21, 2017, 08:21:31 PM
Humans making myths about historical persons
The differences between their real and mythical personality
Humans believing the myth, the power of myth in real life
What is true in the dresdenverse, the myth or the real version

Abraham Lincoln, Vampire Hunter.  lol
Title: Re: A Fistful of Warlocks (SPOILERS: FISTFUL OF WARLOCKS)
Post by: Gman on October 27, 2017, 09:43:59 PM
Was anyone else underwhelmed by Kemmler?  Did not seem very impressive, or formidable in the least.  Didn't set him apart from a run of the mill warlock.
Kemmler was younger and less powerful, decades later he was much more more dangerous. Look how more powerful Harry had become in a bit over a decade.
Title: Re: A Fistful of Warlocks (SPOILERS: FISTFUL OF WARLOCKS)
Post by: wardenferry419 on October 28, 2017, 12:15:00 AM
Kemmler probably found good sponsors.
Title: Re: A Fistful of Warlocks (SPOILERS: FISTFUL OF WARLOCKS)
Post by: knnn on October 30, 2017, 10:58:09 AM
Kemmler probably found good sponsors Bob.

More ominous this way.     ;)
Title: Re: A Fistful of Warlocks (SPOILERS: FISTFUL OF WARLOCKS)
Post by: wardenferry419 on October 30, 2017, 11:58:15 AM
Good correection.