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Monday, June 16, 2025

The first D&D Anthology - Dragontales edited by Kim Mohan

If you have stuck around for awhile, you may remember I reviewed the first novel for Dungeons & Dragons, Quag Keep, some years ago. Before Quag Keep there was only one other story officially tied to D&D, The Gnome Cache by Garrison Ernst (a nom de plume for Gary Gygax). It was serialized in the first issues of The Dragon, and released to the point it was a novella. In reality, it was a complete novel but never fully published. I'm not sure why. That was 1976. In 1978 Quag Keep released, and in 1980 the world received the third piece of D&D fiction.


That is Dragontales, ten stories not attached to any official settings, edited by Kim Mohan, who was working for Dragon Magazine but was not quite Editor-in-Chief yet. I recently read this and spoke about it on my Liam's Lyceum channel, so can watch/listen here if you would like.

The dimensions of this anthology are not like the mass market paperbacks of the lines for Dragonlance and Forgotten Realms that would come in later years. It actually is a magazine, though of heftier paper than most.

Here are the stories.

“The Wizards are Dying” by John L. Jenkins. This has an exciting start, a wizard faces haywire magic and warns his servant Grimsley the gnome of such danger who then barely escapes. We then meet fellows in a tavern discussing this immolation. These are Deihm, a cleric of the Brotherhood, R’kan a dwarf, and Faendril an elf wizard from Llum. It feels very D&D. Maybe an early stab at the success of things like The Sword of Shannara.

The story is rather straightforward: fight into a lich’s lair. It’s also one of the longest. There is a scholar, a girl with the generic fantasy name of Arya, manticores, and a classic party of adventurers. The worldbuilding feels like many a generic D&D world, but isn’t one I’m familiar with.

“Dragon’s Fosterling” by Ruby S. W. Jung. This one is pretty interesting. Asgara is the daughter of a count and one day she gets taken by a dragon. They have an interesting relationship, he teaches her some useful things but he’s pretty wicked still, killing the men that come to rescue her. It’s kinda boring to start, besides that Asgara speaks more like a teenage girl from the 80s with colloquialisms and slang. The end really amps up and I quite liked it. While a bit silly it’s pretty feminist. This one feels less strictly tied to game mechanics of DnD, Jung like the author before her doesn’t seem to have published anything else. A nice reference to the Saga of the Volsungs and the legend of Sigurd.

The third story is “Out of the Eons” by Gardner F. Fox, known for his comics and Kothar and Kyrik sword & sorcery stories. This is a story of Niall of the Far Travels who appeared in several issues of Dragon Magazine. Niall in this one is expanding his wine cellar when he goes through his wall he finds another wall and breaks through that as well. This inadvertently unleashes a sealed green spirit thing known as Adonair. The power of a goddess that is his lover protects him. A good clip, with godly things. Feels prettygeneric but not bad. 

Fourth is “Sir George” by Carl Parlagreco. I thought this might be somehow about a dragon slaying Saint George. Instead, George is the dragon and this is comic. Like Shrek or Myth Adventures. When a knight comes calling for George’s head to win a maiden in matrimony, things go a different route. It’s rather short too and my favorite of the first four. 

Fifth is “Black Lotus Moon” by Tom Moldvay, before his famous Moldvay Basic was released in 1981. In Biaazan, Tamara awakes with the man she spent the night with. She makes a swift acrobatic escape as the city watch bangs on the door, presumably looking for her, as the naked man feigns sleep. She finds out from her fellow thief Saris that the thieves guild and mayor have had enough to her, and instead to trap her and see her hang. We also are introduced to a Conan like Barbarian fur diaper man, Arngrim. And the sorcerer Gorilon, who dreams once a month under the haze of black lotus. Essentially, we’re gathering typical sword & sorcery protagonists to form a D&D party. A longer story, and nicer than the first story which also has a party of characters. While not great literature, I enjoyed it, and the ending was nice. It is another of my favorites in the anthology.

“Honor Among Thieves” by Roger Moore is about two thieves who make a short-lived pact. Pretty short and straightforward, I appreciated that. 

“Ice Dream” by David F. Nalle is 7th and shortest. It’s about a young shepherd being inspired by a traveling skald and it not quite going as we like to think adventure will. Similar to the beginning of Spellfire by Ed Greenwood.

“In the Darkness, Hunting” by Janrae Frank. This follows a woman who lives as a warrior and man among the nomads. She is an exile from her own people who have some inherent power that seems magical. The story starts with a chief for which she acts as war-leader, he wants to make her his woman, even though they’re sworn brothers in arms. She refuses, as among the nomads she would have quite a different life if they knew she was a woman. He then tries to force himself upon her. Easily the most interesting of the batch! This character also appeared in other anthologies, the first being in Amazons! from 1979.

“Just Call Me Albert” by Martin Mundt is another humous one, though told in first person. I don't have much to say on this one.

And last and tenth is “Birth of a Wizard” by Marie Desjardin. This is about a great wizard from a village returning home and the lack of welcome he receives. It really gets into thought-provoking aspects of power and manhood that I was not expecting. Another of the standouts!

Throughout there are also illustrations by James Holloway, M. Kay, Peter Laird, etc. Each story has several by a new artist for each. Some are not credited so blatantly so I'm unsure who all ten were, but the art is quite good!

Overall, the anthology has some good and mediocre stories, as I have come to expect from magazines and anthologies. But as a piece of history, it is very important. We have no orcs; it feels like a mix of the sword & sorcery that dominated fantasy fiction in the 1970s and the heroic fantasy flavor D&D established with later fiction. It is the third publication, and with ten stories increased the fiction of 2 stories to 12! Maybe find a copy and enjoy it yourself?
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