Why was the module recalled? Player outrage? No, it was barely at the distributor. Distributor outrage? Not that I see, is there any evidence the distributor balked, I don’t think so. TSR recalled it, the very same folks who tried to stop it going out in the first place.
I'm not excusing her bad decisions, as I said in my OP. But the comments here seem to prove what I was saying. She gets all of the blame, none of the recognition for the good things that happened under her watch, and Blume and Gary barely even get acknowledged about how TSR would have had to sell before Lorraine even joined, and that only happens if you force people to acknowledge it. If not for Williams, TSR would have went bankrupt and dissolved in the mid 80s.
More than just armchair Internet ramblings, I have a bad taste in my mouth from a lot of the comments directed at her from TSR insiders. It does seem that she was not a beloved boss due in a fair part to her own choices, but some of the vitriol has a particular bitter flavor.
What happened before absolutely is relevant. If you're handed a dumpster fire, how reasonable is it for you to fix it completely and long term, compared to if you're handed a solid business with tons of cashflow? That makes a world of difference, regardless of the industry.
There was plenty of vitriol aimed at management from before her tenure at the helm as well. Just check out that Wired article about the Palace of the Silver Princess.
The Racy Module That Almost Ruined D&D: an Oral History
Of all the Dungeons & Dragons quests out there, finding a copy of "Palace of the Silver Princess" may be the hardest.www.wired.com
Woah. I think you misunderstood.
To be clear, many of the settings that many people continue to love today, from Forgotten Realms to Planescape, from Al Qadim to Ravenloft, got their start under Williams.
That wasn't a comments about how many settings are a good thing. While I would say that the lack of focus wasn't helpful, I think we can now see that the creation of all of the IP was (in the long-term, at least) beneficial.
Maybe, have you seen the DMG or monster manual? Imho those were convenient excuses, vehemently believed by some or even most of the folks that held them at TSR. But I can’t help but think, nay I’m pretty sure, just not absolute, if the author had been a man it wouldn’t have been recalled. Controversial or not.