Back in the 2nd Ed days my game world of choice was Ravenloft.
I loved all the gothic trappings mixed with heroic horror. So even though I was a poor college student most of the time, I tried to get everything I could for this game.
Including all the novels.
Jack over at
Tales of the Grotesque and Dungeonesque is doing a series of reviews on the Ravenloft novels. So I have been reading them. The reviews that is.
I can remember reading Ravenloft novels while in my apartment I shared with three other guys, I remember reading them while giving exams when I was a TA, I remember reading them and feeling guilty about it when I wasn't working on my dissertation.
I don't remember them being quite this bad though.
Oh, I remember that many were not very good. I remember that in the cases of authors that would later go on to do bigger things (like Laurel K. Hamilton, P. N. Elrod and Christie Golden among others) that they read like, well, young but inexperienced authors.
TotGaD though is not doing your typical review, he is looking at the psychosexual mess that underlies each book.
http://talesofthegrotesqueanddungeonesque.blogspot.com/search/label/psycho-sexual%20ravenloft
If you have read these books then you owe it to yourself to read these reviews.
I am enjoying every entry so far and many times I have wished I still had those books laying around.
For myself, I always felt that the Ravenloft books were more akin to a Hammer film; scholcky, over the top, with an abundance of flesh and blood but not a lot of plot. So I am inclined to see these books more favorably than others might. That all being said a lot of good points are raised in these reviews that I must have just glossed over.
Honestly though I am waiting for him to get around to Tapestry of Dark Souls. That thing is train wreck.