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dark-night-star-light · 5 months
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Spirit Animals: The Book of Shane (Reread pt. 18)
DISCLAIMER: WILL CONTAIN SPOILERS FOR THE ENTIRE SERIES EXCEPT THE LAST FOUR BOOKS OF THE SECOND SERIES (THIRD ARC). 
Masterpost
Who is Shane?
“It isn’t very often that a gorilla and an octopus have a polite conversation” (1). God, I forgot how much I love this book.
“‘Hello, hello,’ said a deep voice . . . ” (1). I adore Mulop. He’s probably the best Great Beast.
“‘A villain through and through. The perfect choice to destroy the world and hand it over to me’” (2). This . . . is not how villains think. They genuinely believe they’re doing the right thing. Especially Kovo. He’s not just a mustache twirling villain. He has complex motivations. Why’s he pretending otherwise???
“‘I see a boy who will regret his mistakes . . . and who will miss his only true friend’” (2). The Shane and Abeke crumbs are going to destroy me. “His only true friend” I’m going to start sobbing.
“‘Is there a soul in there with any hope of redemption?’” (3). Shane’s redemption arc is truly one of the best I’ve ever seen. Also, this book clearly hints at the Wyrm, so I wonder why the writers didn’t make Kovo seem even the least bit sympathetic.
“‘I am quite certain,’ said Mulop. ‘that he would disagree.’ ‘I am quite certain,’ said Kovo. ‘that I don’t care’” (4). Obsessed with this interaction.
I don’t know if this is an unpopular opinion or not, but I actually really like the fourth wall break at the end of the introduction.
Venom
I forgot about the quotes . . . 
The parallels to the main story are so good. Both stories start with the summoning of a spirit animal but the contrast between terror and happiness is so jarring.
 “It was only then that the true horror of the situation finally dawned on Shane” (11). I think it’s so interesting that Shane himself never summoned one. That’s such a good choice on the writers’ part.
Shane’s jerking awake and obsessive checking is so sad. It almost feels like a form of PTSD. I love how they characterized him and his bare room.
“It was only after he was satisfied that he had not summoned a spirit animal in his sleep that he remembered to breathe” (11). How would you not know, though? You’d feel it.
“The tapestries showed legendary scenes of Stetriol’s ancient past. On one, torrents of water flowed from the mouth of a frog, creating all the lakes and rivers. Another showed two lizards painting patterns on each other, one with a fine brush and an eye for detail, the other without care” (12). I feel like that means something. Also, that must be Stetriol’s legendary water frog.
“But the Great Beasts had cursed Stetriol. They were better forgotten” (12). I wonder if Shane believes in the Great Beasts’ existence. Also, it’s so interesting how the “God” interpretation works here for the Great Beasts too, seeing as how Shane blames them for Stetriol’s curse. It’s strange he never learned about the First Devourer War.
“Shane imagined that if she attempted to lower herself any more than that, she might never manage to get up again” (13). Shane is hilarious, actually. Just not in a conventional way.
“He wasn’t sure exactly how old she was, but during her history lessons it was easy to imagine that she spoke from personal experience. The oddest thing about her, though, was that she sometimes spoke of the future as if it were history, too” (13). Wait. Did Yumaris bond to the earthworm before the events of the series??? I thought she got it when she drank the Bile??? Also, wow, lots of potential for plot holes there . . . 
“‘You will be glad to have this blade,’ she said . . . ” (13). OMG WAIT. DID SHE SEE THE WAR COMING? IS THAT WHY SHE GAVE HIM THE BLADE??? I think I got it, guys . . .
“Yumaris answered, a faraway look in her eyes. ‘For words and learning do little to impress a jackal.’ Shane tightened his belt and gave his tutor a questioning look. ‘There are no jackals in Stetriol’” (13). Wait. Yumaris saw Zerif coming??? That’s how I’m going to interpret it . . . 
It’s funny how Shane sees Gar as this wicked man, then does nothing about it.
“ . . . rumor had it that King Feliandor himself had added them during his reign, sometime after he had taken to calling himself the Reptile King” (15). So, the people of Stetriol know something at least . . .
“That was only made worse after the great war and the Greencloak invasion, when the island nation’s shores were overrun” (15). Wait, so. Then that means they know the full story, right??? Also I don’t know if I’ve talked about it before but the parallels between the Devourer Wars and the World Wars. The first ones were both referred to as “the great war” and the second was directly caused by the attacking nation being sidelined after being defeated during the first. I almost wonder if the inspiration for the First and Second Devourer Wars came from World War I and II.
Okay, so Zerif’s sunburn makes sense given that he climbed to Muttering Rock, but how was he not fried alive???
So Magda appears to be a servant, but earlier it’s stated that they didn’t have money to pay servants???
I kind of wish they’d shown more scenes of Shane and Drina before the bonding sickness incident.
“‘A worm? A slug? Something small and worthless’” (19). Interesting that Drina says this, because Yumaris’s spirit animal is a worm. Almost feels like Drina has a strained relationship with Yumaris. Foreshadowing the fact that Yumaris is the one that held Drina down when she got killed by Gerathon?
[cut because block limit]
“‘It’s not fair,’ she said . . . ‘I’d be great. I’d be so great’” (19). That’s actually so heartbreaking. 
“But in that moment, he felt no pity for her, and no love - only hate. Then he saw the handkerchief she held against her mouth. It was wet and heavy with blood” (19). This hits so hard. Just straight observations with no emotions attached. It feels so hopeless.
This snake anecdote is interesting. Might talk about it more in my Shane analysis. 
“But then their mother was there” (20). Doesn’t she have the bonding sickness??? Maybe this was a good day.
“‘This is the prince of Stetriol,’ she said. ‘He’ll never bow to a mere snake’” (21). This could either be irony, considering what happened with Gerathon, or it could be symbolism, with snakes representing evil and his mother saying that Shane would never become evil.
“In her absence . . . ” (21). Is Shane’s mom dead?
“ . . . when the Reptile King’s soldiers had bonded with any animal they could get their hands on” (21). So he knows about the Bile, too???
“‘I am in charge!’ Shane shouted” (23). Yeah, gettem. Also it’s hilarious how this must look to Zerif, to have this child shout at him like that.
Why doesn’t Shane just show Zerif to his father? Like, yeah, he’s sick or whatever, but he can just have him thrown in jail afterward again.
Shane casually calling himself leader in front of Gar!!!
“‘We’re the most peaceful nation in Erdas. The rest of the world pretends we don’t exist’” (25). He literally knows the entire story except the part about the existence of Nectar??? Also, why is Gar so insistent on starting a war? Like all he cares about is building his fleet. But why?
“‘It is my honor as regent to stand before you today to christen this ship . . . ’” (27). Erdas had Christianity???
The Stetriol-post-WWI-Germany parallels are. Not subtle.
Isn’t this the scene where Shane realizes that Gar wants to send him away to war to secure his own power??? Why is that not mentioned?
The idea of a small eight-year-old child who’s determined to kill all snakes is simply adorable.
“He was armed for war” (29). *insert picture of small child in scraps of armor*
“‘He wants to hurt the snakes,’ Drina said . . . ‘Because they hurt him’” (30). It’s interesting how Shane’s mom teaches him about harming innocents with revenge as young as eight, but this scene never actually says he processed or learned that.
“‘Most snakes are harmless, Shane. And the one that bit you was only surprised. You don’t want to hurt snakes for being snakes, do you?’” (30). Parallels between the war on the snakes and the war on the Greencloaks? The Greencloaks hurt Shane first, so he tries to hurt all of them, even the innocent ones. 
Small Shane yelling about how he’s not scared is so cute.
“‘Sometimes hate and fear are the same thing’” (30). Is this coded toward his relationship with Drina or the Greencloaks?
“ . . . Shane widened his eyes as if he cared” (31). Shouldn’t . . . he? Isn’t he kinda poor? Stolen food could be expensive . . . Also why are there servants now???
It’s so interesting how we don’t see Drina’s response to Shane asking her to leave with him . . .
“The planks that made up the fort had been painted pink and green - Drina’s and Shane’s respective favorite colors” (32). I’m going to assume that Shane’s favorite color is green based on the order the names and colors are listed in . . . his favorite color used to be the color of his future enemies . . . 
“He trailed his hand along a pink plank, curled his fingers into the gap, and with sudden violence ripped the board free” (32). He’s ripping away his childhood . . . ?
Oh, this is the scene where he realizes Gar’s plans to send him away to danger.
“If Shane refused to sail with the fleet, he would look like a coward” (32). He says . . . right before the exposition about his plan to leave Stetriol. Does he think that won’t make him look like a coward???
“Perhaps they’d even have a cure for Drina” (33). He’s right . . . in a sense. Even though it’s never explicitly stated, it's definitely implied that Nectar can’t cure bonding sickness, it can only prevent it.
Nobody: Literally nobody: Shane: *screams*
“‘Sugar water. Salt water. One maniac tried to convince my father to drink snake venom’” (34). But like. Why??? Was he unhappy or something?
“‘And during the day, it’s as hot as a cauldron.’ ‘I do not burn easily,’ Zerif said . . . ” (35). Only during the day??? Well, then, a lot of people should’ve been able to get to the top, right??? Just do it during the night . . . why is Zerif the only one who’s done this???
“‘One can learn all sorts of secrets,’ . . . ‘if one takes time to listen at the base of that great pillar’” (35). So Kovo didn’t hire Zerif, Zerif just overheard him talking???
“But Shane wasn’t allowed in the water. He knew he’d never be free” (36). Free, as in freely bonded to a spirit animal??? 
I forgot Shane’s mom died. 
“ . . . the Great Beasts were all but ignored in Stetriol . . . ” (37). Because Stetriolans believe the Great Beasts cursed them? 
It’s interesting how Shane thinks of the Four Fallen as “aid[ing] the Greencloak invasion” (37).
It really means something that Shane chose Mulop and Mulop is the only Great Beast that canonically saw the best in him. Shane and Mulop both have soft spots for each other.
Feliandor-Shane parallels!
“He looked over the portrait for a moment more, and decided he didn’t see much of a resemblance” (38). Shane! Fel! Parallels! Feliandor looking at the portrait of his parents and seeing no resemblance, but seeing that as a negative thing, and Shane seeing the portrait of Fel and seeing no resemblance, but seeing that as a positive thing.
“‘So smug,’ Shane said, feeling a little smug himself” (39). Heh.
[cut because block limit]
“‘Feliandor’s soldiers all used the Bile, and none of them suffered the bonding sickness’” (39). Okay, Shane came to the right conclusion, but did nobody tell him that the bonding sickness didn't even exist before the war?
How does Shane know what a talisman even is? Isn’t that some sort of secret?
The idea of the true king having the Jade Serpent is such a cool concept, and having the talisman be in the throne as a very literal interpretation of that is kind of interesting, because it kind of symbolizes how frivolous and material Kovo saw being king of Stetriol as. By “true king” he literally meant “guy who sits on the throne”, instead of something like “had the qualities of a king”.
“Would that mean Gar was the true king of Stetriol?” (41). See, this is what I mean. The narrative implies that having the talisman equals being the true king, even though that’s just what Zerif says.
Shane tries to save the kangaroo! That’s such a cool symbolism moment, representing how he truly just had good intentions.
“But there were no jackals in Stetriol” (43). Throwback moment.
“He refused, too, to admit that his wife had been sick” (44). Why did the king marry a woman with bonding sickness, anyway?
“But when his daughter . . . was similarly stricken, something in the king has snapped” (44) and “‘But the real trouble happened when he decided he could cure himself . . . He killed his own spirit animal’” (45) imply that the king killed his spirit animal around the time Drina got the sickness. It’s interesting how the combination of the death of a spirit animal and the bonding sickness compound on one another instead of canceling each other out. 
“‘ . . . I’d have to admit that the king is . . . unfit. That Stetriol is without a true leader’” (44). Not really anything wrong with that, though? He could just claim his position as leader.
Zerif refers to Shane as “Prince Shane”!!!
So Shane knew the entire story of what happened except the part about the Greencloaks having the Nectar. And that’s the turning point. That’s the moment he goes from being innocent to . . . not so much. 
Kovo’s message being so literal is perfect symbolism for how Shane saw being king as a surface-level thing. Just have a powerful spirit animal and no sickness and you’ll be a great ruler! Never mind any other qualities a king may need!
“The sense of triumph he experienced in that moment . . . ” (46). This reminds me of how he’s described to have “cold triumph” in his eyes during the showdown on Muttering Rock.
“ . . . bracing himself for her verbal abuse” (46). It’s so sad how he got used to that, though, even though he knew it wasn’t her fault.
“The curse had been broken” (47). Ironic.
“Shane stood on the beach that night and watched his sad little handmade boat go up in flames” (47). Symbolism for destruction of innocence, me thinks. The boat was made out of his childhood playhouse.
It’s so interesting how Shane didn’t get a real spirit animal, unlike Fel. Just thinking about how in another nation, he’d have been the only one in his family to not live up to expectations.
“He felt neither. But while their eyes were averted, he allowed himself a furtive smile” (48). Sort of makes me think that Shane’s morals immediately going out the window is about the destruction of his innocence more than him finally realizing it was an option to kill his father.
“What kind of person would want a spirit animal? A ruler, thought Shane. A king.” (48). This is what I meant when I said that Shane saw very shallow things as qualities of a good ruler rather than actual good qualities.
“Shane dreamed he’d bonded with a crocodile” (48). Ohohohohooho. 
“The creature had drowned one man and maimed two others before it had been subdued” (48). Kind of reminds me of that scene in Blood Ties where Shane sacrifices his own soldier to save Abeke. He doesn’t care who’s loyal to him.
“He woke slowly from an untroubled sleep” (49). Unlike the past two years . . . 
Also this story proves that Zerif’s jackal was a natural spirit animal . . . but we know he took the Bile. We also know after the war, it runs away, but wouldn’t their bond have been natural by that point? How did it leave him?
Vendetta
“The war was over, and he’d won it” (55). Gotta love the stark contrast between this section and the next one (Vengeance).
“But who needed to tell them apart anymore? What was the point of borders, anyway? It all belonged to him now” (55). Shane being up high symbolism for his ego?
“They’d both been lying for a very long time, hiding their true natures, like a crocodile hides beneath the surface of the water, waiting to strike” (56). The crocodile-Shane symbolism is just such a cool thread. It represents his corruption and redemption beautifully.
“The days he’d spent on the boat with Abeke had been … Well, they had been a pleasant respite from months of war” (56). I love how subtle this book is with Shane’s feelings for Abeke. You just get these little gems throughout that show how much he does truly care for her and how much it did hurt to betray her.
I like how it’s shown very clearly how hard the Greencloaks tried to fight to get the talismans back. Like they didn’t just give up hope at the end of Rise and Fall like the narrative suggests. No, they still tried to get them back. And they very nearly did.
“‘Have a care!’ Shane shouted. ‘Lose me and you lose the talismans’” (58). The ego that drips off of Shane in this section is just. Wow, this guy really talked back to a Great Beast. It’s honestly so well done.
“If there was one thing Shane couldn’t stand, it was feeling powerless. He’d had enough of that back in Stetriol. But he hadn’t truly been powerless in a long time. Not since he’d drunk the Bile and joined Zerif in his campaign against the Greencloaks” (58). I kind of want to know what Zerif’s motive in all this is? Why does he hate the Greencloaks? This is a great way of tying Shane pre-corruption and Shane post-corruption, though.
“‘Why not? Let them come in force,’ Shane scoffed. ‘I took them on single-handedly. What chance would they have against my army?’” (59). Shane is such an egoistic little bitch in this section, it's hilarious.
“‘You would not wish to displease Gerathon.’ ‘I know that,’ Shane spat. His face grew warm despite the blustery wind. ‘I know that well’”  (59). Ohhhhhhhh.
Shane’s fear of spiders parallels Meilin’s fear of spiders. They both started hating spiders during the same incident (Drina getting murdered by her own spirit animal). And Shane’s ego in this section perfectly matches Meilin’s near the beginning of the series, as well. 
“ . . . the most beautiful to Shane’s eye was the leopard of amber. It seemed to glow with its own inner light” (62). Well, warning that I’m about to read into this way more than the author probably meant for me to. The talisman is almost definitely symbolism for Abeke. It says “to Shane’s eye” meaning that objectively, the talisman probably doesn’t look that much better than the other talismans. Just like how, objectively, Abeke looks pretty average, but to Shane she’s more than that. It also says there’s an “inner light” which implies something that shines from within, not necessarily anything physical to see. Just like how Abeke has an inner charm. Also, the obvious leopard-Abeke symbolism.
Why does Shane have a vial of Bile??? Why would he need that???
“Kovo’s Obsidian Ape likewise enhanced his vision, but in a subtly different way than the falcon did” (65). I wonder how the Greencloaks got their hands on Kovo’s talisman and why they never used it before.
“[The Amber Leopard] made him feel at ease in this Niloan jungle Uraza had once called home. It was simply the most practical choice, he told himself” (66). Mhm.
“They had trusted their neighbors. That had apparently been a mistake” (67). Love the detached, almost unreliable way this is narrated. Out of context, you would think that Shane was not the one responsible for all the destruction.
“‘You killed me, whether you meant to or not. And that,’ he said, ‘is your nature’” (69). Probably more about Drina, honestly, not Gar.
“ . . . Shane jolted awake . . . ” (69). Hmmmm. So that didn’t go away then.
“Conor and Rollan had almost bragged about it when they’d told him” (70). Wow, Shane is an unreliable narrator.
“He was completely cut off from his sword, the talismans were a hopeless tangle on the floor . . . ” (71). This is why he should’ve kept the talismans on his person.
“ . . . feigning innocence before he remembered that he was in fact innocent” (73). Wow. Shane corruption arc go brrrrrr.
“The village, he decided, must have been protecting Greencloaks. It was the only explanation for the savagery with which the Conquerors had descended” (73). Wow, Shane really is such a manipulative ass in this section, and I love it. 
[cut because block limit]
“ . . . he couldn’t bring himself to pose as a Greencloak” (74). Shane’s ego is really getting in his own way, like my guy. Come on.
“ . . . Shane couldn’t leave him alone in the jungle. Could he?” (75). Reading on a bit further, you can tell that Shane kind of really doesn’t care about Achi and only takes him because he’s useful as a guide.
“But he knew what question Achi was waiting to hear, and he asked it” (78). Shane is manipulative and charming as hell.
“‘Abeke?’ Shane called, louder this time. ‘Abeke, if you’re out there, I can explain everything’” (80). God, I want to know what he would’ve said. Like think about the possibilities. 
“Shane made an involuntary gurgling sound” (81). THAT’S SO FUNNY.
Shane giving the Amber Leopard to Achi cements the Achi-Abeke parallels, in my head.
“He climbed even more nimbly now that he wore Abeke’s talisman - Uraza’s talisman, Shane corrected himself” (82). Ohhhh, so he does think of it as Abeke’s. 
“‘Did you ever hear the story about how the goanna and the perentie got their coloring?’” (83). Kinda wanna hear that one.
“Kovo escaped, but he lost the tail to the cats” (85). I wanna say, it’s pretty unlikely that this story actually happened in canon, because as seen in Tales of the Great Beasts, Uraza did actually like Kovo before they were enemies, saying that it unsettled her that he would work with murderers and calling him her neighbor. But a cute story nonetheless.
Also the story is kind of foreshadowing in its own sense, since in it Kovo is manipulative, but is still defeated in the end. 
“But that was the beauty of the Bile, wasn’t it? No one could resist it in the end. Not even stubborn, foolhardy Drina” (86). Foolhardy??? It’s still unclear whether Drina was in on the plan to get herself killed. In fact, it’s unclear whether Shane knew that the plan was to get Drina killed. 
“He didn’t need to bribe Achi, and he didn’t need to bully him either” (87). Well, at least Shane still has a shred of decency in this section.
“‘She was no Greencloak. She wasn’t even Marked’” (88). Wow, the Conquerors are straight-up stupid. How dumb do you have to be to realize that a non-Marked person means you got the wrong person??? And how dumb is Achi’s dad to gamble that they’d be that dumb?
“In [the jackal’s] jaws was a bloody crown, forged in the shape of a snake devouring its own tail’” (88). Wow, foreshadowing for Zerif’s betrayal for sure.
“‘He got the cats to stop fighting. He saved the day!’” (89). It’s ironic because Shane is clearly paralleling himself, but also he’s the one that started a fight in real life. 
“He was Uraza, and he was home” (91). Kinda cute, if you ignore the context.
“Not that it would have been a very strategic choice with a man-eating cat bearing down on him” (92). Right, but he’s used to sifting through talismans while running. He’s done it several times before in this section. Yes, he’s carrying Achi, but he’s also got Uraza’s talisman to take care of him while he searches. 
“‘And I lost the man I - a good man, Tarik’” (93). Well, that’s about as close to canon as we’ll get.
“‘I haven’t killed anyone,’ Shane growled” (93). Someone needs to teach this guy that killing can be indirect. And also, I don’t think that’s true. There are several battles that he’s been in, so I feel like it’s unrealistic to say he’s never killed anyone.
“‘So high and mighty. Not against sending an assassin after me, though, are they?’” (93). Yeah??? This is a war??? They’re gonna send someone after you, duh. Bro, what kind of logic is that???
“He acted quickly, and replaced the Amber Leopard with Kovo’s Obsidian Ape” (94). Kind of showing him throwing his morals out the window, since he was so repelled by the Obsidian Ape earlier.
“Black and white. Precisely how the Greencloaks saw the world” (95). As if you don’t??? My guy???
“‘Achi, it’s okay,’ Shane said quickly. ‘Grahv won’t hurt you’” (95). Wonder how true that would be if Lishay had called his bluff . . . 
“Shane had given him Jhi’s talisman and carried him all the way here despite the ache in his limbs” (96). Why did Shane carry him? Achi should’ve been healed? And why did Achi let Shane carry him?
“ . . . Shane turned to Achi and winked . . . ” (97). Bitch, he really tried that??? Like unironically??? I’m laughing. Man, I’m laughing so fucking hard.
“He tried to grasp at a fleeting sensation of victory, but it slipped through his fingers and was gone” (97). Kind of like how his victory over the Greencloaks in this section is short-lived and he lost anyway.
Vengeance
The quote. I’m sobbing.
“‘You won. We lost. Do you have to rub it in?’” (103). My guy. Do you know how war works???
“There was real hatred there. Real hunger for revenge” (103). Shane trying desperately to convince himself he’s not as much in the wrong as he is is simply splendid.
“‘Don’t play innocent with me,’ Shane countered. ‘I wrote the book on that particular trick . . . ’” (105). Paralleling the previous section?
“But he could always get more money” (106). How???
“‘Deadly?’ Shane echoed. ‘A frog?’” (107). Does he seriously not know about the whole bright-colors-warn-predators thing??? Huh . . . 
Why does he have a vial of Bile on him??? That is so weird.
“‘They came close, though,’ Shane said, fighting to keep his voice steady” (108). Not him still trying desperately to stroke his own ego.
“ . . . hoarded so jealously over the years” (108). One thing I notice across several books in this series is that whenever they talk about the Greencloak-Nectar situation, they always say “hoarded jealously”. Like, variety in word choice is not a thing apparently.
“‘ . . . What sort of snake?’” (109). This section is so appealing because of the mystery aspect. 
“But what if it didn’t stay that way? What if it could somehow do more harm? The Bile was Shane’s mess. And he was looking to clean up his messes” (110). Right, but he effectively does nothing. The Bile does lose all its power??? That’s so weird. But okay, I guess.
“ . . . stopped to trade for a bag of roasted nuts . . . ” (110). Where did he get the money??? He just gave it all away?
“‘You sound just like a snake I used to know’” (111). Yumaris???
Where is Shane getting the money to hire Anya??? Like huh???
Also Anya is described in an incredibly similar fashion to Anka. Like. I can see how you might get the two mixed up.
“As Shane’s parents and sister grew sicker, he was left entirely to her whims” (113). The relationship between Shane and Yumaris is so interesting and kind of contradictory in some places. 
The whole conversation about tools is probably a reference to Venom, when Yumaris insists that Shane needs many tools . . .
“If this year of war had taught him anyway, it was how much he’d taken for granted as a prince” (115). This is directly contradictory to his statement in Vendetta about how he’s not pampered despite being a prince. Character development or something, I guess. 
“‘“Bushmaster” is a code. And it leads to that jungle temple’” (117). How does he know that??? Is it something Yumaris taught him???
Feel like the venom-poison-snake-frog thing is symbolism for Shane and Yumaris. Shane is a snake, who’ll hurt you by himself, but for Yumaris to hurt you, you have to interact with her first.
“‘The bright colors are a warning to predators: I am dangerous and I taste bad. Stay away.’ ‘Sort of like a Greencloak,’ Shane said under his breath” (119). LOL.
“‘We don’t have bears here.’ ‘Tell that to the bear!’” (120). I love them, Your Honor. 
[cut because block limit]
“Outside of Stetriol, they were supposed to pretend he was no more than their commander’s nephew” (121). Even the Conquerors that aren’t Stetriolan know that???
“‘I’m thinking we throw Soyland to the bear and she lets us go’” (123). I’m with Anya there, not gonna lie.
“‘The bear was a victim in all this. Poisoning her isn't right’” (124). Redemption arc Shane go brrrrr. 
“‘“Bushmaster” was what we called this operation. We- We named them all after snakes’” (124). Oh, so that’s how he knew.
Also, what was the operation specifically?
I get that they have a common enemy, but Anya doesn’t react with much ferocity toward Shane’s reveal. Like. They haven’t even known each other that long.
“But there was no point in turning down the man’s gratitude, and he accepted it with a curt nod” (127). Yes. Yes, there is??? Yes, there is.
“Shane wondered briefly how many young men and women of Stetriol had marched into battle across Erdas” (127). Oh, so they are from Stetriol. Interesting. 
“Each and every drop was a drop made by their hands” (129). Wow, the paranoia starts already.
“And then there was Yumaris, who made an unusual choice” (130). Okay, so if Yumaris hadn’t already been bonded to her worm before, then how did she know the future before taking Bile? It said she spoke of the future like the past, so was she just making that up???
“Alone among the kings and queens of Stetriol. Food for worms, all of them” (131). I guess you can never really escape your fate, even if you become great.
“‘Sir,’ said Lovvorn. ‘Sire!’ said Alix. ‘Idiot,’ said Anya” (136). Cackling.
“‘Did she tell you I have a weak spot for girl archers? Did she think I’d be more likely to trust you if you reminded me of someone I care about?’” (137). Ooooooooh. Kicking my feet at the subtle references to Abeke.
Shane blaming Yumaris for Drina’s death as if he isn’t the one that came up with the plan in the first place is so damn blame-shifty. (He came up with it right? Feel like that hasn’t been confirmed, only heavily implied.)
“‘Gerathon was going to kill one of you that day. By stepping in when I did, I ensured it wasn’t you’” (140). Why was Gerathon going to kill one of them??? I thought it was Drina, so the plan could go . . . well, according to plan. But it really seems like Shane and Yumaris had no idea Drina was going to be killed??? So what was the original plan exactly???
“‘I wish I could see for myself how you’ve grown’” (140). Awwww.
“‘The world above will need a protector who can walk the line between good and evil’” (141). Why do they need to be evil???
What happens to Anya after this? Does she just go back? Do they ever talk again? Does she know Shane eventually dies?
Venture
“‘I’m not here to cause trouble Maddox’” (148). Why are they immediately antagonistic??? I literally don’t remember shit about this. 
“ . . . Abhay wasn’t from Stetriol - and he didn’t have an obvious grudge” (149). Wait. Are the men mad because Shane lost the war? Or something different?
“‘I am Maddox’s king’” (149). He just said it didn’t bother him to not be called a king like a page ago.
“‘People said that, at the end, you fought alongside the Greencloaks’” (149). How do people even know that? It happened at the Evertree, and nobody else was there.
“‘For us, the war never ended’” (151). Huh.
“Shane dreamed he summoned a wolf . . . he knew he’d never be alone again” (151). This is kind of heartbreaking, in a way. Like he’s been alone his whole life and only because of war is he making friends. And never ones that he really keeps.
“Others called him a traitor” (153). For fighting with Greencloaks in the end?
“She had a special knack for pointing out Shane’s shortcomings, and pride ranked high on the list” (154). She’s not wrong. Even in The Burning Tide, when Shane is trying to redeem himself, he wants to impress Abeke more than anything else.
“But, oh, how he wanted to trash this guy” (154). Yeah, me too, honestly. He doesn’t appear to be the most open-minded.
“Shane could swear the figure was wearing a crown” (155). Why is he watching her during a fight, anyway??? Like, dude???
“Shane dreamed he summoned a panda. The animal wrapped him in its arms” (155). Awwww.
“‘The dirt is no place for pride, my king’” (156). If Shane wanted to help himself, shouldn't he have gotten up and not laid pathetically in the dirt?
“‘A natural bond. We grew up together’” (157). I wonder what Viktor thinks of Bile bonds in general. He grew up in Stetriol, so he’d probably be pretty torn.
Okay, so he thanks Shane for the Bile, but also wouldn’t he find it somewhat repulsive, seeing as he has a good bond with his own spirit animal?
“ . . . held no medicinal properties as far as Shane or Yumaris could discover” (159). I wish they’d shown more of Shane and Yumaris working together.
“Shane dreamed he summoned a falcon . . . He was untouchable” (160). Paralleling his ego?
“Here, at last, were the true warriors” (161). How were they picked? 
“‘See now, Karmo? I said you’d get the hang of this’” (162). Is Karmo being forced? Maybe because of his merging with his animal? But that’s a secret, right?
“He did, however, wear a tight bandage around his left forearm” (162). Oop, Shane got him.
[cut because block limit]
The woman with the nickname “Greenslayer” needs a backstory of her own.
Why did Yeffa not want Karmo to help Viktor??? There’s a reason, right?
“It was clear who they held responsible for the outcome of the war” (164). Yep, that’s it.
“Shane wasn’t wholly surprised when Karmo made a break for it later that night” (165). Why didn’t Karmo do that earlier, though?
“‘Shane as in Shane the Reptile King? Devourer Shane?’ ‘It’s just Shane these days’” (167). Shane’s humor’s at its finest when it’s unintended.
“‘King Shane is a no-good snake’” (168). The snake symbolism thread is just *chef’s kiss*
“Who would want to keep so many smelly, scaly reptiles on display?” (169). It’s ironic how Shane is the self-proclaimed Reptile King, yet hates reptiles in reality. Almost like he hates himself from the start.
“‘Zerif chose some real lowlifes. Devin was a bully. Ana was a thief. And Tahlia, the girl from Stetriol? She was downright vicious. We were all afraid of her’” (171). Kind of wonder where Ana’s from. Like, what’s her story? Maybe she was a thief because of circumstance, like Rollan.
“Faced with such devastation, Shane had decided that day that he would activate their secret asset in the next battle. Let the Greencloaks hurt one another for a change” (171). It’s almost funny how jealous he sounds. 
“‘My tribe has never had a Rain Dancer. That means we get less respect in Nilo than the insects and grubs’” (172). But Abeke’s tribe was the same before she was declared Rain Dancer, right? It doesn’t really seem like respect was Abeke’s tribe’s main problem.
“‘Finally getting called a hero, and it’s for all the wrong reasons’” (172). I think even if Karmo had succeeded in the Rumfuss mission, he’d probably have come around anyway in the end. Like he has now.
“‘The Reptile Queen?’ ‘That’s what she calls herself.’ Shane felt a weight in the pit of his stomach . . . It was the feeling he got whenever something bad was happening - and that it was his fault” (173). Oh, he figured it out immediately.
“Shane dreamed he summoned a leopard . . . And he knew he had been forgiven for all he’d done wrong” (174). Oh my God, I’m actually gonna start crying. This like. Perfectly encapsulates the tragedy of Abeke and Shane. Like Abeke forgives him but at the cost of his own life.
“‘The snake is you, if it wasn’t clear’” (176). God, this guy is stupid.
“Shane had once worn that crown . . . ” (178). How did she get her hands on Stetriol’s crown?
Okay, but how did Tahlia survive??? How did she get off the docks?
Shane didn’t know what the execution method was going to be, and didn’t have a plan for dealing with it. Which means that if they had just been planning on running him through with a sword or something, he’d have been screwed. Like, wow, that was straight-up stupid of him.
“One of the tattooed islanders lay unconscious at their feet, while the second one stood at the edge of the tree line, pleading with a huge emu . . . ” (182). Yeah, gettem. This means that the brothers are Piri and Timone. Which means they didn’t change and are still both corrupted as fuck. Nice to see that Timone has regressed with his spirit animal bond.
“She wouldn’t let go of her knives any more than she would let go of her hate” (184). It’s giving Conor and Cordelia in that final battle.
“‘The war is over!’ he cried” (186). Aww.
“‘But this time, we’ll be fighting on the right side’” (186). Shane’s redemption arc is so perfectly started in this book. I will never not be angry that he and Abeke never sat down after they met up again and had a genuine conversation about their feelings.
Final thoughts and rating (doing the negatives first this time):
Zerif and Yumaris’s bonds are weirdly inconsistent. Zerif’s bond is natural, seeing as he was bonded even before finding the Bile, so how come his jackal ran away? It can’t do that, can it? And Yumaris had a Bile bond, but had her powers even before she was bonded? So that’s sort of a plot hole. I also felt the last two stories were slightly more off-putting than the first two. They felt strange in terms of tone, which I get that they were supposed to be, but the resolutions to those sections felt so weirdly rushed. While I did enjoy getting to see what happened to Tahlia, she’s just such a weird villain. I can’t imagine her having enough finesse to put together an entire army, the way she screams at Shane and the way she doesn’t take his hand at the end. With Shane, you can see that he’s smart and careful and manipulative, but with Tahlia, I just have such a hard time believing she could stop acting like a child long enough to put together a two-hundred-person army. Anya was a strange character. I liked her while reading, but her ending was so out-of-place. 
Most of the negatives of the book are nit-picks, because there’s almost nothing wrong with this book, in my opinion. First of all, the parallels. They’re so good. I feel like Nick Eliopulos has such a different writing style, one that favors symbolism and parallels and other analyzation things over the story itself. It was really fun trying to find them all and made my reread almost as fun as the original. Also the Easter eggs??? Like the Piri and Timone thing, or the several hints about Abeke. It was fantastic. The story really rewards you for paying attention to the main series and this book. First two stories were at their best, with the backstory and the Shane-snake-crocodile symbolism. The complicated relationships in Shane’s life were also written so well, such as Drina and Yumaris. It’s clear that Shane both hated and loved both of them. It also shows why he cared for Abeke so much, seeing as that was one relationship that didn’t feel as complicated to him, at least in the beginning. Exploration of the Bile was done well, too. We can see that Timone, for example, is still bonded, because his bond was originally natural, but Piri’s killer whale apparently left him. Getting Karmo’s backstory was also a highlight. And it paves the way for Devin;s story in Tales of the Fallen Beasts. And Shane the unreliable narrator. Excellently done. His pride being his “fatal flaw”, so to speak? And that being a thread that carried the entire book? It was astonishingly well done. I could see it even when it wasn’t explicitly said. Shane as a character carries this book on his back. He is such an excellent protagonist (anti-hero?) to follow, and it makes me wish we’d gotten more page time of him in the main series, as well as more chapters from his perspective. He’s so smart, and the places where he’s figuring things out or using his wits just make him even better. This book is the one that made Shane my favorite character because he’s just written with so much depth and this book does a spectacular job of humanizing him. 
Rating: 10/10
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crayonurchin · 6 months
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it's been 84 years, but at last, we have an OC doodle dump :)
featuring @empressofthelibrary ranger Drina, in werewolf form :3
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softbutmad · 1 year
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💚
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natache · 1 year
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Na krajnjoj stazi prepreke mrvi
djevojka crna, gorštačke krvi,
s kamena kraja, mrkih daljina,
vječito tužna, studena Drina.
S hukom se ruši, ne pjeva ništa,
Pomamno juri kroz razbojišta.
Na krajnjem cilju, u jutra plava,
trkače prima pospana Sava.
Branko Ćopić
For @rivermint
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bayofwolves · 10 months
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what if iskos was huge . like what if they weren’t pussies and made him as big in the books as he is in the game.
“seagull-sized” fuck that i want a 9 foot tall spider thanks very much.
WAIT A SECOND... what if there were giant spiders in stetriol? i feel like that’s entirely plausible???? it’s literally stetriol?? the fantasy version of australia?? if they don’t have giant insects and arachnids who does???
this is my new headcanon. adding that to my general erdas headcanons: stetriol has giant bugs!
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vojkovrucina · 1 year
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Vidikovac Zelenika na Tari
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snkskyler15 · 2 years
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Share with you an Oc of mine
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Drina Feragor
29 years old
human/ berseker
mercenary
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fierce-little-miana · 8 months
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"It takes some form of internal corruption, a side willing to forego passivity and the essence of morality, to fight back."
Ryan Hollinger - MANDY: A Disturbingly Insane Love Story
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eldritchsaltgod · 1 year
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Little chibi head-shots of some OCs for bingo/meme purposes. Most of them are mine, but Drina (first brunette on the bottom row), and Rice (last one on the bottom with the flower in their hair) belongs to Ocean and Naho respectively.
OCs: Faris . Ara . Corv . Ava
Drina . Louis . Aristos . Rice
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crayonurchin · 5 months
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Some doodles, featuring @empressofthelibrary good good girl Drina
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coffeenewstom · 1 year
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Warum eigentlich der Balkan, Herr Tom?
Vor etwas mehr als 20 Jahren saß ich an einem Sonntagmorgen im Taxi und hörte B5 aktuell. Es war Pfingsten und die BR-Korrespondenten brachten ihre Radio-Features, halbstündige Radioreportagen, die Sahnestücke, das Salz in der Suppe, die Momente, die aus dem journalistischen Arbeitsalltag herausragen. Der Balkan-Korrespondent berichtete über Srebrenica, eine kleine, unwichtige Provinzstadt, die…
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Quando ti basta una riga di descrizione, ma il capo dice che ne vuole almeno cinque... :-D 
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o7ksy2lxbbu · 1 year
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LA DIOSA ES LA SEXY CONEJITA EN LA SILLA GIRATORIA Blowjob hypnosis by Worlds Fastest Hypnotist RETARD SISTER lends her pussy to BROTHER Cute ladyboy gets sucked Busty Shyla Stylez and Alexis Amore Enjoy Sex Straight stud Mikah Lake gives twink rimjob and bareback anal Indian Village Girl First Time Forced Sex with Boy Friend Porn Video Brooke Bliss blows Cullen good at the Cutie Pad Mais uma de leve New Mylfs - Big Titted Amateur Milf Jasmine Daze Gets A Warm Creamy Welcome On Her First Porn Shoot
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Turistička organizacija Republike Srpske u saradnji sa Predstavništvom Republike Srpske u Republici Srbiji na Sajmu turizma u Beogradu
Turistička organizacija Republike Srpske u saradnji sa Predstavništvom Republike Srpske u Republici Srbiji se i ove godine predstavlja na Međunarodnom sajmu turizma u Beogradu. Svi posetioci će imati priliku da se upoznaju sa novitetima u turističkoj ponudi Srpske za predstojeću sezonu.Banja Luka će predstaviti svoju ponudu aktivnog odmora i raftinga na reci Vrbas kao i izuzetnu gastronomsku ponudu grada na Vrbasu, vožnju dajacima, tvrđavu Kastel i jedno međunarodno priznato najlepše selo na svetu Krupu na Vrbasu. Višegrad i ostale podrinjske opštine će i ove godine predstaviti kako svoju kulturno-istorijsku ponudu, među kojima UNESKO priznatu Višegradsku ćupriju i Andrićgrad tako i ostale aktivnosti vožnje turističkim barkama na Drini, SUP i kanu vožnje Drinom, stare tvrđave duž kanjona Drine i brojne biciklističke i pešačke staze ove regije. TO Foča sa Nacionalnim parkom Sutjeska svakako već godinama privlači pažnju svojim atraktivnim planinskim vrhovima i označenim stazama za pešačenje i planinarenje, ove godine sa proširenom turističkom ponudom ruta i sadržaja u parku. Rafting na Tari je nadasve jedna od najatraktivnijih turističkih ponuda Srpske i svako može pronaći odličnu kombinaciju ponude za sebe, bilo da voli samo adrenalinsku rafting vožnju ili kombinaciju foto safarija, jahanja konja, pešačenja sa raftingom. Ponuda smeštaja, odlična gastronomska karta i vrhunski domaćini su ono što odlikuje sve kampove na Tari i Drini. Svoju ponudu predstaviće i potkozarske opštine pa će prisutni imati priliku da saznaju više kako je Gradiška izgledala u rimska vremena, koje biciklističke staze najbolje da izaberete ako želite da vidite stare crkve brvnare ili koje planinarkse staze su za početnike na Kozari, te kako izgleda penjanje Via feratom na Kozari.U romantični šarm srednjeg veka možete da zavirite ukoliko posetite Kraljevsko selo Kotromanićevo kod Doboja ili se popnete na tvrđavu u Doboju, ako sa druge strane volite avanturu onda predlažemo paraglajding doživljaj sa Ozrena kao jedinstveno iskustvo sa vrhunskim instruktorima. Gosti iz Srbije tradicionalno vole Bijeljinu i Etno selo Stanišići koje svake godine proširuje i upotpunjuje svoju ponudu i srdačno dočekuje svoje prijatelje iz Srbije. Veliki broj smeštajnih kapaciteta koji se svake godine povećavaju u Gradu Bijeljini svojom raznovrsnošću i odličnom gastro ponudom sve više privlače pažnju. Banjska ponuda Republike Srpske je možemo slobodno reći jedna od najboljih u regionu, kako kvalitetom i jedinstvenošću termo-mineralnih voda tako i svojom vrhunskom uslugom i uređenošću banjskih kapaciteta i širokom lepezom usluga koje nude, sa nama će se predstaviti ZTC Vrućica, Terme Ozren, Banja Dvorovi, Banja Laktaši, Višegradska banja i Banja Kulaši. Pored svega navedenog na štandu će se naći još veliki broj predloga za posete, obilaske i aktivnosti u destinacijama širom Republike Srpske,
Izvor (saopštenje i fotografije): Turistička organizacija Republike Srpske
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-Perućac
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