Getting Back and looking for D&D Novel Suggestions

Labon

First Post
Hi guys,

It's been years since I've played D&D (mid 80's), and wanted to start playing again w/ the new 4e. But to get the creative juices flowing I was looking for suggestions on D&D novels, specifically those with theives guilds (or similar) and/or some hardcore (hack and slash) dungeoneering (other than Drizzt) and/or city adventures. Any help would be great!
 

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Recently I've been reading Paul Kidd's Greyhawk novels, and they are super fun hack & slash romps that don't take themselves too seriously. The main characters are a decidedly chaotic good ranger, his sentient hell hound pelt, and a sultry fairy. The first one is called White Plume mountain, and is based on the module of the same name.

A few months back I read Richard Baker's most recent trilogy, Blades of the Moonsea- the first one is called Swordmage. Those were lots of fun, especially the second one. He sets up a good scenario that generates the plot for the trilogy pretty naturally, the main characters are engaging and interesting, and the villains are those you love to hate.

I also enjoyed the first half of the War of the Spider Queen series. This is a series of six novels about the drow written by different authors. It starts with Dissolution by Richard Lee Byers. The series kind of loses steam in the 4th and 5th book, but I plowed through those because I loved the characters so much. Things picked up again in the 6th book, and there are some fun plane hopping stories.

If you are looking for some good D&Desque novels, I can't recommend the Wit'ch books by James Clemens highly enough. They were quite well written and engaging sword & sorcery novels. The story was good, the characters interesting and enjoyable, the world was fun to explore, and the action was exciting. I'm sad the author seems to have turned away from fantasy and writes thrillers now, under the name James Rollins. I guess if Lucasfilm gives you some cash to write the new Indiana Jones novelization, though, you can't say no. :)
 

It sound like you might be interested in post-spellplague FR novels (4e). I gather this from another thread:

Abolethic Sovereignty
-Plauge of Spells
-City of Torment

Blades of the Moonsea
-The Swordmage
-Corsair
-Avenger

Chosen of Nendawen
-The Fall of Highwatch

The Empyrean Odyssey
-The Gossamer Plain
-The Fractured Sky
-The Crystal Mountain

The Haunted Lands
-Unclean
-Undead
-Unholy
-Realms of the Dead (Anthology)

Transitions
-The Orc King
-The Pirate King
-The Ghost King

Ed Greenwood Presents Waterdeep
-Blackstaff Tower
-Mistshore
-Downshadow
-City of the Dead
-The God Catcher

The Wilds
-The Fanged Crown
-The Restless Shore
-The Edge of Chaos
-Wrath of the Blue Lady

I think Transitions is a Drizzt series, but I included just in case. I hope this info is helpful.
 




Blades of the Moonsea
-The Swordmage
-Corsair
-Avenger

Just wanted to say, I read through the Moonsea series and they were a great suggestion. Two thumbs up!
 


Though they aren't technically D&D books, I'd take a look at Steven Brust's Jhereg series- a highly magical setting (with resurrection as a well-known factor); an assassin protagonist; lots of stuff about the criminal underworld in a fantasy setting... try it out, they are also FAR better than any actual D&D fiction I've read.

The first book is called Jhereg.
 

Well, there's the (serialized, incomplete) War of the Burning Sky novel.

Russ had me write it back in 2009 to release as a serial on the site, but I only got half-way through before the project fell by the wayside. So now it's sorta like watching two episodes of a TV show that got canceled. I happen to think that TV show is pretty good.
 

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