Dragons of Autumn Twilight
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Is this apart of Dungeons And Dragons or is it an orignal fantasy work?
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Michael
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Jan 27, 2014 03:56PM

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Still, it's not a complete loss - I plan on giving the books to my son when he's 10.

It's not the story per se that keeps me re-reading them even after 25 years, it's the characters. For me, it's like walking along with old friends that I've known almost my whole life, and though the path is always the same, it never gets old for me.


But to answer the question: It is essentially Tolkien revisited. Tolkien for the next gen. Instead of Hobbits you have Kender--a small race who are trained thieves from birth. Otherwise you got all the stock characters, elves that live in the forest for thousands of years, dwarves who live inside their mountains, humans who are short lived and therefore power hungry and restless. You have fighters, warriors and wizards. Oh, and gods who pretend to be human. But dare I say, this series beats Lord of the Rings hands down?

As an author who focuses on the fantasy genre myself now, I can say with confidence that the Dragonlance books were a very big influence on my decision to write in the fantasy world, and not only because I became fascinated with magic and dragons so many years ago.
Like Andrew, I read the books so many times that the characters became my best friends who were always only a page away.
The Dragonlance books taught me that our favorite books are always the ones where we feel something for one or more of the characters. Whether we love them or despise them, it's the emotion itself that is key.
Sure, the storyline may have that D&D adventure feeling to it, but it's the characters' struggles, their successes and defeats, which make the books noteworthy.
I like to say that as an author, if we feel nothing for the characters that we write about, how can we expect our readers to? The Dragonlance books taught me that lesson at an early age, and for that I am forever grateful.
Personal note: Raist is my favorite character :)

Raist taught me that "evil" or even "teetering on the ledge of being a bad guy" characters are SO MUCH more interesting than rooting for the good guys. :)

I never saw Raistlin as evil. I saw him as determined and donning the black robes was just another step to achieve his goal. Well, I guess that was the point, after all.
I made Raistlin's tea from the Inn of the Last Home Cook book. There was this herb shop in Minneapolis where I bought the ingredients in bulk. And when we went camping it was Otik's spiced fried potatoes for everyone.

I never saw Raistlin as evil. I saw..."
I agree. Raistlin was always more of an allegory for hubris for me.

The one thing the books really seemed to follow is the whole idea of male characters being the heroes. Goldmoon wasn't necessarily a warrior type, and ends up being the healer. Laurana picked up what she could along the way and turned into an able fighter/commander, but then you have Tanis, Caramon, Sturm, Flint... all warrior types. Tas the thief type, Raist the mage... Back when I first read them the stories were amazing, but reading them today, I wish hey'd had another female character that could have easily matched Caramon in skill. (Not counting Kit, since she was more of a side character.)
Guess that's partly why I've flipped the tables in my own work. I love the Dragonlance books, but they did have that kind of 'typical' feel to them in some ways.



I was very disappointed when reading Mary Kirchoff's "Kendermore" later; it was basically a (unintended) demonstration of why the whole idea behind kenders wasn't the least bit feasible as a culture/society.

I was very disappointed when reading Mary Kirch..."
Hey, I think you're onto something because as you recall, only Tas, Raist and Caramon made it into the next "Twins" trilogy.
At first I was enamored with Tanis and the fact that he had two women, one elf and one human, well, he was quite simply the man. In fact, I still think he's the man and yes, I would follow Tanis into Hell.


I highly recommend them.

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