Mark’s Comments (group member since Sep 20, 2017)


Mark’s comments from the Dragonlance group.

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Sep 25, 2017 08:22AM

1268 I appreciate your comments.

I'm 50 pages into Dragons of Winter and the drama between Tanis and Laurana is driving me crazy. (Tanis told her he loved Kitiara but now he's having second thoughts and he's getting jealous of this other dude, Elistan. This has lead to a lot of loud, angsty arguments. Seriously, he yells at her.) I try not to get too hung up on it since tbh I'm reading books that were probably meant for a much younger demographic. Sturm's strict adherence to his lawful-good warrior's code of honor is also a little exasperating. And the way he keeps wanting to kill Raistlin and the way Caramoon keeps (with voice cracking each time) saying some variation of "You'll have to get through me first!"

Basically, I'm taking the mentality that I just need to grin and bear it through these books since they build the foundation for the other novels (I'm assuming all of this - correct me if I'm wrong). Maybe I should go back and read some of the historical novels that take place chronogically prior to Chronicles.

Based entirely off some advice I found on Dragonlance Nexus, I had planned on reading the classic core novels (Chronicles, Legends, Lost Chronicles, Second Generation), then move onto the core novels of 5th Age, Age of Mortals, & then the historical novels.

Do you recommend a different progression?
Sep 20, 2017 02:15PM

1268 I just finished Dragons of Autumn Twilight and I have to say that it was a painful read. I won't list all of the problems I had with the book but I agree with most of the points made by anyone who gives this book a 1-star review on goodreads or amazon.

But I really want to like this book and this series. I know that the Dragonlance universe is huge and the idea of diving into a huge world with tons of lore really appeals to me. So my question is, does it get better? Do the writing styles of Weiss, Hickman, et al., improve over time as they mature as authors?

I'm a huge fan of GoT and LoTR and I've read a lot of the books by Terry Brooks, R.A. Salvatore (many years ago), Robin Hobb, Terry Goodkind, Raymond Feist, and others, so I've read a lot of the genre, but this book was just such a slog.