Monday, 25 November 2019

20. 1988. (Mar.) - Greyhawk (Gygax) - Gary Gygax - Come Endless Darkness (Gygax #3)

Image result for Come Endless Darkness



Series: Gord, the Rogue #5


More like Come Endless Dorkness, am I right? Frankly this isn't a fun read, on each page you can hear the dice roll and endless fight follows endless fight, like a live commentary of a D&D game. Very little character development and it just feels like a succession of boss fights in a game. Overall it's an incredibly dull read. 

Gygax clearly knows his world, of course he created the universe of Greyhawk where this is set, but unfortunately he isn't as good at communicating it to the reader, it's a universe full of demons and lords of evil and good and balance, our heroes fight for balance against evil and that's pretty much it. Previous novels in the series made a much better job at developing the characters, but you can't just have a whole installment where it just feels like nothing is going anywhere.

It is also a confusing read, I am sure Gygax can keep all the demons straight in his mind, but here we get a bunch of them which are just so many faceless enemies to kill and unfortunately the same happens with the main character, who are, of course, all male. We have a bard, a druid, a rogue and a barbarian as a typical D&D party all with names starting with the letters C or G making everything even more confusing. If you've read previous installments you know who they are, but the characterization is so slight that even when you get deaths the lack any kind of impact. The worst possible kind of tie-in, dull, repetitive and uninteresting.

TL;DR: 2/10 Exceedingly dull and repetitive.

Sunday, 8 September 2019

19. 1988 (Mar.) - Dragonlance (D&D) - Richard A. Knaak - The Legend of Huma (Dragonlance #10)

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Series: Heroes Volume 1

The first of the Dragonlance novels not to feature the characters from the Chronicles series, this goes into the backstory of the world and to a character that although was never actually present in the Chronicles is mentioned several times in them. 


Huma is a mythical figure in the Dragonlance universe as the first to have found the Dragonlances, magical weapons that could be used against dragons in a really effective way. He was also a hero to the Solamnic orders of Knights, a kind of folk hero and ideal knight blessed by the god Paladine and defeater of the dragonqueen Takhisis. The original chronicles were full of references to him and to a song based on his exploits, Strum Brightblade being a particular fan of him.

As a novel it is a competent bit of writing, Knaak is pretty good at this kind of stuff. It's of course no some kind of masterpiece but it is also thoroughly enjoyable, with some cool characters, particularly in Kaz the nice Minotaur and the dragon/cleric/love interest Gwyneth. It's ultimately a story of heroic sacrifice in the Dragonlance universe, and it does its job well. 

TL; DR: 7/10

Thursday, 23 May 2019

18. 1988 (Feb.) - Greyhawk (D&D) - Rose Estes - The Demon Hand (Greyhawk #6)


Series: Greyhawk Adventures Vol. 5, Mika Trilogy Vol. 3

As D&D novels go, the Greyhawk series was never as popular as the Forgotten Realms with the Drizzt stories or the Dragonlance chronicles. Although Greyhawk is actually the original setting of D&D, D&D Vanilla if you will, it never captured the imagination like those other universes did. That being said, this is a really cool novel actually. 

For the last few books set in this universe we've followed Mika who is a kind of Warrior-Shaman of a wolf themed clan and his companions which include a princess turned into a wolf by magic. Ok. So now I open this book and resume the adventures of Mika... up until about a third into the book where the whole party of heroes gets stuck inside a column in a cave for 20 years. 

Yes, they get completely out of the main plot, and we now follow attempts to save them by their then infant children which are now around 20 years old. Oh and those children are a half-human, half-harpy, product of Mika being raped by a harpy; and a half-wolf, half-enchanted wolf princess man, product of sex between two wolves, one of which is actually an enchanted princess. Makes sense? It actually does, just not when explaining it. The whole thing becomes an underground adventure 20 years later with Dwarves and Trolls and demon people, and it's a riot. Not great literature, but at times so weird, as you slowly see the harpy and werewolf falling in love, that it feels original. Great fun. 

TL;DR: 7/10 

Saturday, 23 February 2019

17. 1987 (Dec.) - Forgotten Realms (D&D) - R. A. Salvatore - The Crystal Shard (Forgotten Realms #2)


Series: Icewind Dale Trilogy 1

This is the first book on the Forgotten Realms Drizzt saga, yes the first book and not the fourth book and they are now trying to tell us it is... this was the first to be published, it introduces us to the characters and so on. Just because Salvatore decided to make some prequels years later that doesn't retroactively make this the fourth book. This isn't even like Star Wars as there was no previous plan to have three previous novels, that was just cashing in to the success of the series (well, so was Star Wars, but the idea was there very close to the beginning).

It's an OK fantasy novel, not much here is great, not the writing or even most of the characters or the plot-line but it helps flesh out the world and sets up an interesting basis for further adventures, and the book ends clearly pointing us towards the next volume in the series, this isn't really a stand-alone. Many see Drizzt as a paragon of the fantasy genre growing up by having a black character... as having an anti-racist message, well that might indeed be partially the case but it is undermined by the fact that Drizzt is very much an exception among exceptions, he's the one good black elf, all other black elves are horrible criminals, this guy is special... so you know, not a great message. Still, it's a fun read. 

TL;DR: 6/10