I don't think anything else done by Weis and Hickman comes close to these for me. You care about the characters, you cry with them, and you never want it to end.
I grew up with them and the Dragonlance Legends and I will always remember them fondly.Įvery fantasy stereotype is there, you have a quest, you have the battles, you have betrayal, you have good and bad and evil, and most of all, you care about them. He was always the character that I loved. I remember, even after all these years, Tanis (the hero), Cameron (the warrior), Tasslehoff (kender, plucky, but good for comic relief), Flint (dour dwarf), Sturm (stern, unyielding knight), Kitiara (Kit!).but most of all, I remember reading about Raistlin with his ruined health, his bitterness, his sarcasm, his cruelty to his brother, and his hourglass eyes, and being mostly in love with him. I have not read them in recent years, and I have to confess that I am loathe to do so, because you can never go back, but they deserve 5 stars just for the warm memories I have of them, and how they made me feel as I read them. I have read, and reread, these books many, many times, for comfort, for memory's sake, for any number of reasons. No mean feat given I grew up in a small town in Malaysia! I have not read them in recent years, and I have to confess that I am loathe to do so, because you can never go back, but they deserve 5 stars just for the warm memories I have of them, and how they m I have to give these five stars because my love of fantasy stems from my stumbling onto these, and reading them, as a teenager. No mean feat given I grew up in a small town in Malaysia! I have read, and reread, these books many, many times, for comfort, for memory's sake, for any number of reasons.
I have to give these five stars because my love of fantasy stems from my stumbling onto these, and reading them, as a teenager. More or less the most formative text of my entire life, it kicked my reading hobby into overdrive.more Mikey and I eventually grew apart, but Dragonlance and I never will.ĥ stars. Mikey countered that it was in fact very cool because it had dragons. Lang said it was not cool, basing this on the admittedly unenthusiastic cover art. Mikey brought The Dragonlance Chronicles to school one day. 5 star In 5th grade we became suddenly aware of the great public school pecking order. Mikey and I eventually grew apart, but Dragonlance and I never will. The original thread for this Collector's Guide is here.In 5th grade we became suddenly aware of the great public school pecking order. This was the tenth installment when the Collector's Guides were first published.
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But the world of Krynn also has some of the most unusual licensed products associated with any D&D setting, including stained glass windows, a variety of jigsaw puzzles and even a series of British Telecom phone cards.Ĭredit is due to Sue Cook's "Komplete Krynnish Kollection" articles in the Legends of the Lance newsletters, Michael Falconer's Dragonlance product list (from ) and the excellent Dragonlance Nexus web site, all of which made the job of compiling this particular collector's guide much easier. This particular guide focuses on the Dragonlance campaign setting, which was launched in 1984.ĭragonlance has nearly thirty years of history behind it, and a seemingly endless stream of novels, game products, novels, comics and novels has been published during this time. This is one of a series of Echohawk's D&D Collector's Guides, each of which aims to provide a comprehensive guide to D&D products published for a particular setting or era of the game. Welcome to the Dragonlance Collector's Guide!