My partner is the real crime fiction expert, but I think it’s fairly typical of Marsh. In fact Alleyn is so bland that I think she is deliberately trying to keep the detective out of the spotlight.
But relegating the detective to minor character is something most of them do occasionally, all...
Sure, neither do I, but I can look at the evidence and make inferences.
Sure, but why is the adventure separate? The cost suggests they could easily be combined into one book - and that would actually be more profitable since fewer covers equals cheaper printing costs. I would suggest it was...
Try reading them - there is nothing to suggest they are Thayan. They seem more Sigil if anything.
A few other points:
The marketing for the adventure makes no secret of the setting. However the marketing of the splat book makes no mention of FR.
The book contains what are, in effect, core...
Quite. I've never had the remotest interest in getting in the sea or on a boat, so I'm not frightened of sharks. I used to be afraid of dogs, managed to overcome that.
Much as I hate to bring this thread back on topic*, it seems to me that this is a slimmer book that might contain as many as 11 subclasses. I’m not sure all that crunch will leave much space for setting-specific lore. The new factions appear to be multiversal.
*you don’t see many reptiles here...
It's built into the Immortals rules of the Basic D&D sequels, and is certainly a well known trope. I guess it comes from Moorcock, who quite often kills off gods, usually with Stormbringer. My group killed Tharizdun as the level 20 boss, but failed to make it permanent.