I finished R.A. Salvatore's Dragonslayer's Return tonight. As
dlyman29 said, it's easily his best work. I absolutely loved this story. I wish he could do more like it. I wouldn't want to see more sequels per se, but I always love the time/dimension displaced traveller stories, moreso when they involve fantasy elements. Now, I think I'm going to read Neil Gaiman's Coraline next. I should be done with that by Thursday. After that, I'm going to finish Ian Irvine's Dark is the Moon and The Way Between the Worlds. After that, I believe I have some Thomas Covenant stuff by Stephen Donaldson to read. :)
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:-D
Re:
Thanks for the suggestion, though. Feel free to suggest more when you think of them.
told ya so
If you haven't gotten to them yet, the new generic "Dungeons and Dragons" series that Wizards has put out are pretty good. There are five so far: The Savage Caves (http://www.wizards.com/catalog/product.asp?88220), The Living Dead (http://www.wizards.com/catalog/product.asp?88230), The Oath of Nerull (http://www.wizards.com/catalog/product.asp?882400000), City of Fire (http://www.wizards.com/catalog/product.asp?882500000), and The Bloody Eye (http://www.wizards.com/catalog/product.asp?178520000) with several others plotted and soon to come out (about a 2-3 month gap between each).
They're not a "series" per se, kinda what the Forgotten Realms "Harpers" series was, except the main characters of these books are the ones from the PHB, DMG and other core Rulebooks: Redgar the Fighter, Ember the Monk, Hennet the Sorcerer, Jozan the Cleric of Pelor, Lidda the halfling Rogue, Krusk the half-orc Barbarian, Alhandra the Paladin, etc... with various players in a one shot book... they're short - usually about 200 pages or so, but they're all by one author - T.H. Lain. Basically a novelization of the 3e ruleset but not hocking specific modules like TSR did with the original Dragonlance or Forgotten Realms series...
Well written in a Salvitorian type style (descriptive but action oriented) and provide great real time type examples of the common 3e spells, skills, feats, items, etc... and how the classes function. I like them quite a bit so far (I finally see the uses for an gnome illusionist).
=-D
Dan
Re: told ya so
Re: told ya so
Actually as soon as I see the new ones, I grab them immediately...
Re: told ya so
I'll consider getting that one at least. We'll see what happens from there. Thanks for the tip.
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honestly the books are worth it just for the extended characterizations of the archtypes. they really flesh out the classes quite a bit.
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For now, though, my plate is rather full. :)