Add the caveman, healer, and monk data.base entries supplied by
<Someone>, plus the healer one from <Someone>'s list of outstanding bugs and
requests. Every role now has its own entry. I left "dwarven caveman"
and "gnomish caveman" pointing at the generic dwarf and gnome entries
respectively, because the caveman quote feels to me to be more human-
specific than the earlier role ones have been.
I added blank lines to the monk quote to break it into paragraphs,
and made two minor tweaks to the text. I hope we can find or invent a
separate entry for Master Kaen though. Getting a quote that refers to
Buddhism for him seems wrong to me, but leaving the generic human one
now that there's a monk-specific one didn't feel right either.
I've moved a few quest guardians around this time. Deciding which
of them should yield the corresponding role entries and which shouldn't
involves judgement calls and I don't claim that the current situation
is now perfect.
Add the wizard entry submitted by <Someone>. It doesn't fit
perfectly but seems better than getting the generic human (or other
race) entry. It pointed out that "gnomish wizard" is ambiguous between
a type of monster and a player character race/role combination. I had
to add a special case to the code to make that work out right.
This also makes all the roles that have the their entry match any
race; conversely, match the race's monster for roles that don't have an
entry (caveman, healer, monk, priest, and samurai; we really should get
them their own). Previously many of the non-human ones yielded "I don't
have any information on such things" and at least one (elven priest)
yielded the generic human entry.
Regarding the Shrieker source,
http://www.peldor.com/chapters/story678.html:
" The player characters depicted in these stories are copyright
1991-2000 by Thomas A. Miller. Any resemblance to any persons
or characters either real or fictional is utterly coincidental.
Copying and/or distribution of these stories is permissible under
the sole condition that no money is made in the process. In that
case, I hope you enjoy them!
Thomas A. Miller"