AshenNedra
Educated
- Joined
- May 22, 2018
- Messages
- 76
No, no . I wasn't clear enough. I read the Death Gates' cycle way before I tried the Dragonlance trilogy.You might be confusing the Dragonlance Chronicles trilogy (and the sequel Legends trilogy) with later series by Weis and Hickman, such as the Death Gate cycle of 7 books, that had no relation to D&D/AD&D. Dragonlance was conceived by TSR as a linked series of 12 adventure modules forming an epic Tolkienesque fantasy, with the associated novel trilogy an experiment that proved wildly successful, ultimately giving rise to a vast quantity of D&D/AD&D literature, including just about every setting published by TSR, but of generally declining quality.Ah. then, thank you, but no thank you, I guess.
Maybe it's the themes touched upon by W and H, that I don't like?
The magic system was nice. The planes were beautifully described too, and somewhat creative.
The Death Gates' cycle was overall good, but I was always waiting for Haplo, or his Lord, to be somewhat useful. and not for super Alfred, the Messiah, to save the day.
Are the RS Drizzt's books more varied, 'exotic', and, dare I say, fun?
R.A. Salvatore's novels apparently have their fans.
I kind of liked the series as a teenager, except for the caveat mentioned above.
I even read the Arabic setting one, with djinns, warring gods, and the two feuding tribe of nomads (was it the Rose or Desert thorn's trilogy?).
I loved it, as a child/teenager.
I remember buying Arabian Nights the day after I finished the third book.
Then, many years later, I tried the Dragonlance series (Autumn twilight and the following books), and didn't like it at all.
I was thinking that maybe the themes favored by W and H were not for me after all.