Jump to ratings and reviews
Rate this book

Pierced Heart

Rate this book
Pierced Heart at a GlanceGet lost in this fantasy novel by award-winning game designer Robin D. Laws.A compelling storyline set in the world of the Over the Edge RPG and On the Edge CCG.Read for enjoyment, or use the material within to fuel your next campaign.A Curious More about Pierced HeartAn American singer dies under strange circumstances on Al Amarja, the Mediterranean island where surreal menace lurks beneath a thin veneer of normalcy. The death throws a curious group of people together in a tightly-woven web of hallucination, mystery, and violence.

They an honorable gangster dedicated to keeping his promises, a New Age conman capable of charming anyone except himself, a funeral director who isn't quite the same species as the rest of us, and a certain pivotal figure in human history

Pierced Heart is a novel set in the world of the Over the Edge RPG and On the Edge CCG. It is written by award-winning game designer Robin D. Laws, of Feng Shui, The Dying Earth, and Heroquest fame.

The book is available in PDF. Although it is out of print, a limited number of print copies are still available.

Pierced Excerpt"A boom box, a flotation device, a purse; these were the things she carried with her into the pool area of the Bienvenidos Hotel that night. The already-inflated flotation device was shaped like an innertube and colored to look like a hollowed-out lime slice. The small purse was made of transparent plastic. It was empty except for a vial, also made of transparent plastic.

A large sign warned her, in eight languages, that use of the pool outside regular hours was at her own risk. She checked the times posted on the sign to make sure that no lifeguard would be on duty. She stepped quickly through the shower area. She had already taken a shower up in her room, washing herself very thoroughly.

Once into the pool room itself, she checked to confirm that she was alone. As she expected, the place was empty. It was eleven P.M. People vacationing in the Edge had better things to do at eleven at night than splash around in a pool. Or worse things, depending on your outlook."

207 pages, Kindle Edition

First published December 1, 1996

29 people want to read

About the author

Robin D. Laws

146 books196 followers
Writer and game designer Robin D. Laws brought you such roleplaying games as Ashen Stars, The Esoterrorists, The Dying Earth, Heroquest and Feng Shui. He is the author of seven novels, most recently The Worldwound Gambit from Paizo. For Robin's much-praised works of gaming history and analysis, see Hamlet's Hit Points, Robin's Laws of Game Mastering and 40 Years of Gen Con.

Ratings & Reviews

What do you think?
Rate this book

Friends & Following

Create a free account to discover what your friends think of this book!

Community Reviews

5 stars
4 (16%)
4 stars
8 (32%)
3 stars
11 (44%)
2 stars
2 (8%)
1 star
0 (0%)
Displaying 1 - 7 of 7 reviews
Profile Image for Benjamin.
1,440 reviews24 followers
Read
February 13, 2023
OK, I'm breaking my streak of not reading rpg tie-in novels that I get with Bundle of Holding bundles for this, Robin D. Laws's first novel, and the only novel-length fiction set in the Over the Edge RPG game. Some spoilers, but come on, as if you're going to read this?

And it's fine. It reminds me of something Laws said about his Pathfinder novel The Worldwound Gambit, where he took a standard RPG fantasy tie-in novel and made one modernist tweak -- putting it in the present tense -- and the Pathfinder fans were incensed at first, before maybe coming around to it.

A scan of the Goodreads reviews reveals a similar issue, for both positive and negative reviews: ostensibly tie-in fiction to the weird world of Al Amarja, with its weird science, paranormal activity, and wide-ranging conspiracies, this book focuses on a woman (into sex and drugs) investigating the death of her twin sister (Christian music star) and the guilt and anger she feels towards her stepbrother (the manager) and sister -- and her ex who happens to have ended up on Al Amarja running a new age con.

Along the way, we get a very brief glimpse of a powerful Satanist (which doesn't add to the story, but gives a signpost for readers who know the RPG), the world-spanning mafia business conspiracy, a new drug, hidden mutants, intra-gang politics, the crooked Customs bureaucracy, and a possibly sentient hallucination and/or avatar. In other words, we get a taste of all the stuff happening on Al Amarja from the RPG. (Well, maybe psychic rats and baboon enforcers would be a nice addition to really round it out.)

Ultimately, the weirdness of the island entangles the protagonist, but ... doesn't exactly touch her or really impinge on her story. As one reviewer noted, the weirdness is a distraction, a school of red herrings for the protagonist who doesn't want to see the pretty ordinary story going on, which is a fun bit of bait-and-switch looked at one way -- or a criminal act of bait-and-switch looked at another way.

This definitely feels like Laws playing with non-genre topics -- love, religion, duty -- in a genre way, but the fact that these two almost seem like parallel and disconnected stories makes this feel like a not great introduction to Over the Edge.
Profile Image for Kirt.
56 reviews11 followers
January 17, 2008
I've read a lot of novels related to gaming or by gaming authors, but nothing compares to Pierced Heart and The Rough and the Smooth, both by Robin D. Laws.

The first is a urban fantasy novel about a woman coming to terms with the suicide of her sibling, against a backdrop of strangeness that only serves to cleverly distract the reader (and many of the characters) from what's really going on. The second is a wonderful fantasy novel with detailed characters and a plot Machiavelli would love, not because it's twisted (tho it is, at points) but because it's political and interesting.

These novels deserve to be let out of the gaming ghetto -- I'd recommend them to non-gamers, even my ex-wife, who is picky and doesn't like genre fiction. The characterization, alone, makes it worth it. Hell, the second one has nothing to do with gaming at all, and calls out for a sequel.
48 reviews
September 13, 2019
This book is a complete premise rejection if I've ever seen one. "Come to Al Amarja, get into some wacky conspiracies, threaten your life with weird science, mock the world and reality at large!" That's the pitch, at least, or at least it should be, but this book is pure bait and switch. 90% of this book is about a woman who has to deal with the trauma of her twin sister's suicide. Al Amarja is barely window dressing. Bit of the mythology pop up, but soon gets swept under the current of the main character's inner struggle. It's almost like the author had a story he wanted to tell, and this was the contract in his hand at the time, source material be damned.

And while the writing is fine, it never seems to get out of second gear. Everything seems vaguely smarmy and disconnected, like some snarky Gen Xer who even feel strongly enough to be nihilistic. I never quite got passionate enough about the book to be truly hate-reading it, but I would have had to get to that level if the book were any longer. It weirdly ends with exposition dumps. I've read worse, but some of those were more enjoyable because I knew what I was getting into. I have no idea why this was set in Al Amarja. What makes it worse is that, as far as I've seen, this is the only novel set in the Over the Edge setting.
Profile Image for Eddy.
Author 96 books51 followers
September 12, 2018
I was expecting a fun, surreal, conspiratorial romp. What I got was a tragic and very human story about loss and faith, that also happened to feature surreal conspiracies. Far, far better than what most RPG tie-in fiction shoots for.
Profile Image for Oliver.
36 reviews
July 30, 2014
In no way epic literature but a fun read. Good introduction for GMs and players of the game. Could double as sourcebook.
Profile Image for Jim.
11 reviews5 followers
November 29, 2022
Very good book, ending was a little rushed but still v good
Displaying 1 - 7 of 7 reviews

Can't find what you're looking for?

Get help and learn more about the design.