The "Treasure Hunters" group of the Second Campaign defeated the vile reptile god (in reality a Naga). They also freed many of the villagers charmed by the naga.
We very nearly had three character deaths when the Naga charmed the gnome rogue ("Erky Timbers") and proceeded to attack the ranger and warlock. The wizard (near the ring) was badly burned by the flaming sphere spell.
Everyone though managed to survive thanks to every healing potion they had on them.
Up next?
"Rumors of a magnificent city and foul, horrid rituals! Riches and wonders - or death!"
The Treasure Hunters follow some more leads to the fabled Forbidden City!
Wednesday, August 16, 2017
Tuesday, August 15, 2017
Witch & Witchcraft Reading Challenge: Web of Wind (Silverglass #2)
We are back to the world of Nyctasia r'n Edonaris brenn Rhostshyl and Corson brenn Torisk. Our leading ladies are still on the run from...pretty much everyone when they discover a thief with treasure riddle. Not a map, but a riddle leading to the treasure of the ancient Cymvelan Circle. This order of monks and mystics were destroyed when the locals believed they were practicing black magic. Nyctasia wants to learn what secrets they had, Corson wants gold.
The book unfolds at a much slower pace than did the "running for their lives" tale of Silverglass.
In fact the pace slows WAY down. The heroes spend the vast majority of their time at the Edonaris estate and vineyard. These are distant cousins of Nyctasia, so they are not as haughty as their urban relatives and most importantly they are not trying to have Nyc or Corson killed.
Here the pieces of the riddle are unwound and their secrets found.
The treasure is not a secret cache of gold and treasure, but rather a collection of ancient books. Nyc though notices one of the dusty, web covered books is recently missing and maybe the extinct Cymvelan Circle is not so extinct after all.
The book is a fun read and the mystery, even if slow, was a compelling one.
The "author", J.F. Rivkin, is actually two different people. One wrote the first two books and the other wrote the last two. I am not sure who J.F. Rivkin is and I have still not found out any information about a real identity either.
The book is out of print and there are no digital or audio versions I have found. They pop up every so often at Half-Price books.
2017 Witch & Witchcraft Reading Challenge
Books Read so far: 18
Level: Crone
Witches in this book: Nyctasia is very much a witch
Are they Good Witches or Bad Witches: Nyc does a better job at being good in this book.
Best RPG to Emulate it: For this book I have been trying the characters out in the AGE version of Blue Rose. Despite the Sword and Sorcerery tropes, there is a strong vibe of Romantic Fantasy here as both Corson and Nyc look for a place to belong.
Use in WotWQ: Likely, but since I am using them as characters in the Blue Rose game I am currently playing their involvement might only be as a cameo.
I have the sheets for the characters but need to get to work. So here is a cheat.
I made Corson a warrior. Easy call. Given her propensity to be an adventurer and never settling down I thought "Swashbuckler" was a good choice. She also has Arcane Potential, and in particular The Sight. This covers her feeling of unease around magic. She doesn't see it as much as feel it.
Nyctasia is an adept, but what kind? I gave her Bard to cover a wide a variety of her skills but she doesn't have the Performance pre-req. I am using her Cultural Lore in place of that. I could have gone with a sage as well, but this fits concept wise a little better.
I might give them a try in D&D 5 or Basic D&D next.
The book unfolds at a much slower pace than did the "running for their lives" tale of Silverglass.
In fact the pace slows WAY down. The heroes spend the vast majority of their time at the Edonaris estate and vineyard. These are distant cousins of Nyctasia, so they are not as haughty as their urban relatives and most importantly they are not trying to have Nyc or Corson killed.
Here the pieces of the riddle are unwound and their secrets found.
The treasure is not a secret cache of gold and treasure, but rather a collection of ancient books. Nyc though notices one of the dusty, web covered books is recently missing and maybe the extinct Cymvelan Circle is not so extinct after all.
The book is a fun read and the mystery, even if slow, was a compelling one.
The "author", J.F. Rivkin, is actually two different people. One wrote the first two books and the other wrote the last two. I am not sure who J.F. Rivkin is and I have still not found out any information about a real identity either.
The book is out of print and there are no digital or audio versions I have found. They pop up every so often at Half-Price books.
2017 Witch & Witchcraft Reading Challenge
Books Read so far: 18
Level: Crone
Witches in this book: Nyctasia is very much a witch
Are they Good Witches or Bad Witches: Nyc does a better job at being good in this book.
Best RPG to Emulate it: For this book I have been trying the characters out in the AGE version of Blue Rose. Despite the Sword and Sorcerery tropes, there is a strong vibe of Romantic Fantasy here as both Corson and Nyc look for a place to belong.
Use in WotWQ: Likely, but since I am using them as characters in the Blue Rose game I am currently playing their involvement might only be as a cameo.
I have the sheets for the characters but need to get to work. So here is a cheat.
I made Corson a warrior. Easy call. Given her propensity to be an adventurer and never settling down I thought "Swashbuckler" was a good choice. She also has Arcane Potential, and in particular The Sight. This covers her feeling of unease around magic. She doesn't see it as much as feel it.
Nyctasia is an adept, but what kind? I gave her Bard to cover a wide a variety of her skills but she doesn't have the Performance pre-req. I am using her Cultural Lore in place of that. I could have gone with a sage as well, but this fits concept wise a little better.
I might give them a try in D&D 5 or Basic D&D next.
Monday, August 14, 2017
Monstrous Monday: The Olitiau
Orcs will sometimes use the larger and more monstrous varieties as steeds in battle. These are often called "Orc War bats".
Olitiau (Monstrous Riding Bat)
Basic-era stats
No. Enc.: 1d12 (4d6)
Alignment: Neutral (Chaos)
Movement: 180' (60')
Fly: 360' (120')
Armor Class: 5
Hit Dice: 5
Attacks: 1 (bite) or Sonic shriek
Damage: 1d8 or see below
Save: F4
Morale: 10
Hoard Class: None
XP: 135
Olitiau are giant bats. Found in deep, dark caves these creatures can be used as steeds for those that know the secrets of summoning them or for subterranean races that speak their language.
Like Giant Bats (qv) these creatures can also be vampiric, though the percentage is much higher, 45%. The bite of an Olitiau will not cause a living creature to rise as a vampire though.
The Olitiau have a bite attack and sonic shriek. They can use one or the other once per round. The sonic shriek is a cone 5' at it's base (mouth) and extends 120' long and 40' wide. Creatures caught in this area take 1d6 points of damage and must save vs. Paralyzation or be stunned (unable to attack) for 1 round. The Olitiau can extend this range to 360' long and 120' wide, but only creatures of less than 1 HD are affected then.
Olitiau do not fare well in sunlight and are at a -2 on all attacks. They are unaffected by darkness of any sort including magical darkness.
Summon Olitiau
Level: Druid 2, Wizard 2, Witch /Warlock 2
Duration: 24 hours
Range: 60 miles
By means of this spell, the caster can summon one* Olitiau to serve it for 24 hours. The olitiau must be treated well and given its body weight in fresh meat to eat. The olitiau will operate as the steed for the caster and even attack whomever the caster directs it to attack. Most often the olitiau are summoned as steeds and can carry 300lbs of weight.
The olitiau can only be summoned at night or underground where it is dark.
At higher levels the caster can summon more Olitiau.
At 7th level the caster may summon two, at 9th 3 may be summoned and so on for every other level to a maximum of 8 olitiau at level 19.
Thursday, August 10, 2017
This Old Dragon: Issue #103
1985 was an interesting year for D&D. It saw the publication of Unearthed Arcana and Oriental Adventures. "Deities and Demigods" had been renamed to "Legends and Lore". 60 Minutes did their hatchet job on D&D. We were deep in what many have called the "Hickman Revolution" and indeed the third Dragonlance novel, last of the first trilogy was published. 1985 gave us a little peek at what 2nd Edition AD&D would have been like and it would see the departure of Gary from TSR. A lot of this can be seen in November 1985 and in issue #103 of This Old Dragon!
While there is a loose theme here, the real theme of this issue is a glimpse into the future.
But first, let's start with the cover. My copy is missing the cover so I had to pop in the old CD-ROM to see it. It's a cool blue dragon that reminds me of earlier covers. I don't remember it at all really.
The Letters section covers the old "Photocopying service" Dragon used to offer. Anyone take advantage of that?
Also starting next year (1986) Dragon will be $3.50 an issue.
Gary is up in one of the biggest "What If" scenarios we have all talked about. That is "What if Gary Gygax had designed AD&D 2nd Edition?" We will never really know, but there are some tantalizing bits in this month's From the Sorceror's Scroll. The Future of the Game talks about how now that UA and Oriental Adventures are now out the game should evolve to a 2nd Edition. He planned out the publication order to include the new Monster Manual, Player's Handbook, DM's Guide and a new Legends and Lore (a name he very much opposed). It should be noted that here Gary also says that a 3rd and 4th editions (or more) are not only inevitable but also desirable as the AD&D game is "vital. It grows and it changes". He said there is no likelihood that the AD&D rules will ever be set in stone. BTW, if you want to get an idea of what AD&D 2nd Edition as-written-by Gary Gygax *could* have looked like check out +Joseph Bloch's Adventures Dark & Deep. He spent a lot of time researching and this article was the genesis of that.
Kim Mohan is up with updates for Unearthed Arcana.
We had a rule in our games, that if it was in the books it was law, even if the rule was obviously "off". We did it this way to avoid rule-lawyering arguments over intent. Plus the book was an impartial party. It didn't change based on the situation at hand. So I can't recall if we used any of this errata or not.
There are many reasons why people don't play gnomes. I think this is one of the biggest ones. All About Krynn's Gnomes from Roger Moore details the "Tinker" gnomes of Krynn. Of course, this is also why my brother, who is now an engineer, only played gnomes. I have to admit I REALLY disliked the Tinker Gnome idea and I hated the execution of the idea. An entire race prone to failure and explosions? You know what we call that right? Extinct. Honestly, it was not till 3e that I could even look at gnomes again and really not till 4e that they became something I'd consider having a character for.
Like Dogs? Stephen Inniss seems to with a collection of 12 domestic breeds in A Dozen Domestic Dogs. My favorite bits are on the armor for fighting dogs.
The Role of Books covers a few books I am not at all familiar with. Though there is one, "Dragonlance, Dragons of Spring Dawning" that everyone knows. One, "The Song of Mavin Manyshaped" by Sheri S. Tepper sounds interesting.
An ad for Palladium's Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles & Other Strangeness is next. Long before there was a cartoon there was this game. Talk about striking when the iron is hot!
Stephen Inniss is back. He had submitted an article on centaurs at the same time another author, Kelly Adams has submitted an article on centaurs. The resulting article, The Centaur Papers, is a combination of these two works. They fit together nicely (deft editing) and produce a long article, but what must be considered to be the Master's Thesis on Centaurs in D&D. At 11 pages it is no small article. Every so often I run into someone that is really, really into some concept in the game. I remember back in the 90s stumbling upon a website dedicated to the Bariaur race, others for different things. This article reminds me of that. Just detail on detail. If you are into centaurs at all then this is your "must read" article.
Our centerfold is a collection of errata and corrections for Unearthed Arcana.
TSR Previews lets us know that Oriental Adventures and Saga of Old City are on the way. This is followed by TSR Profiles of Gary Gygax himself.
The Wages of Stress is the fiction bit for this issue. It takes place in the fantastic future world of 2007 when everyone is connected by computer. Ok, not to be too glib about it there is a bit about how everyone's health can be monitored remotely.
The Ares section is next.
A Traveller article on the planet Tarus is up first. Of Nobbles and Men by Paul Vernon. He had some great White Dwarf articles around this time as well.
The Saurians is the article I used the most from this issue. A race (with subraces) for Star Frontiers I mixed them in with the Sea Devils and the Silurians from Doctor Who to make a race of "Saurials" that I used in many sci-fi games and then later used again in D&D. Plus it was easy to add in bits of UFOlogy to this with their Reptoids.
Roger E. Moore has a review of the Gen Con 18 designer's forum on Supers RPG in A Super-Powered Seminar. A brief history of supers games is discussed here and what the future mught hold.
The Marvel-Phile covers three heroes I know nothing about; Armadillo, Count Nefaria and Hyperion.
Ads...Convention Calendar...Wormy and Snarf Quest.
Dragonmirth gets in a dig at 60 Minutes.
Issue #103 was not a bad issue, just not a memorable one for me. Some memorable articles and a tantalizing article on AD&D 2nd Ed.
Curious about what White Dwarf was doing at the same time? Check out my White Dwarf Wednesday for issue #71.
While there is a loose theme here, the real theme of this issue is a glimpse into the future.
But first, let's start with the cover. My copy is missing the cover so I had to pop in the old CD-ROM to see it. It's a cool blue dragon that reminds me of earlier covers. I don't remember it at all really.
The Letters section covers the old "Photocopying service" Dragon used to offer. Anyone take advantage of that?
Also starting next year (1986) Dragon will be $3.50 an issue.
Gary is up in one of the biggest "What If" scenarios we have all talked about. That is "What if Gary Gygax had designed AD&D 2nd Edition?" We will never really know, but there are some tantalizing bits in this month's From the Sorceror's Scroll. The Future of the Game talks about how now that UA and Oriental Adventures are now out the game should evolve to a 2nd Edition. He planned out the publication order to include the new Monster Manual, Player's Handbook, DM's Guide and a new Legends and Lore (a name he very much opposed). It should be noted that here Gary also says that a 3rd and 4th editions (or more) are not only inevitable but also desirable as the AD&D game is "vital. It grows and it changes". He said there is no likelihood that the AD&D rules will ever be set in stone. BTW, if you want to get an idea of what AD&D 2nd Edition as-written-by Gary Gygax *could* have looked like check out +Joseph Bloch's Adventures Dark & Deep. He spent a lot of time researching and this article was the genesis of that.
Kim Mohan is up with updates for Unearthed Arcana.
We had a rule in our games, that if it was in the books it was law, even if the rule was obviously "off". We did it this way to avoid rule-lawyering arguments over intent. Plus the book was an impartial party. It didn't change based on the situation at hand. So I can't recall if we used any of this errata or not.
There are many reasons why people don't play gnomes. I think this is one of the biggest ones. All About Krynn's Gnomes from Roger Moore details the "Tinker" gnomes of Krynn. Of course, this is also why my brother, who is now an engineer, only played gnomes. I have to admit I REALLY disliked the Tinker Gnome idea and I hated the execution of the idea. An entire race prone to failure and explosions? You know what we call that right? Extinct. Honestly, it was not till 3e that I could even look at gnomes again and really not till 4e that they became something I'd consider having a character for.
Like Dogs? Stephen Inniss seems to with a collection of 12 domestic breeds in A Dozen Domestic Dogs. My favorite bits are on the armor for fighting dogs.
The Role of Books covers a few books I am not at all familiar with. Though there is one, "Dragonlance, Dragons of Spring Dawning" that everyone knows. One, "The Song of Mavin Manyshaped" by Sheri S. Tepper sounds interesting.
An ad for Palladium's Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles & Other Strangeness is next. Long before there was a cartoon there was this game. Talk about striking when the iron is hot!
Stephen Inniss is back. He had submitted an article on centaurs at the same time another author, Kelly Adams has submitted an article on centaurs. The resulting article, The Centaur Papers, is a combination of these two works. They fit together nicely (deft editing) and produce a long article, but what must be considered to be the Master's Thesis on Centaurs in D&D. At 11 pages it is no small article. Every so often I run into someone that is really, really into some concept in the game. I remember back in the 90s stumbling upon a website dedicated to the Bariaur race, others for different things. This article reminds me of that. Just detail on detail. If you are into centaurs at all then this is your "must read" article.
Our centerfold is a collection of errata and corrections for Unearthed Arcana.
TSR Previews lets us know that Oriental Adventures and Saga of Old City are on the way. This is followed by TSR Profiles of Gary Gygax himself.
The Wages of Stress is the fiction bit for this issue. It takes place in the fantastic future world of 2007 when everyone is connected by computer. Ok, not to be too glib about it there is a bit about how everyone's health can be monitored remotely.
The Ares section is next.
A Traveller article on the planet Tarus is up first. Of Nobbles and Men by Paul Vernon. He had some great White Dwarf articles around this time as well.
The Saurians is the article I used the most from this issue. A race (with subraces) for Star Frontiers I mixed them in with the Sea Devils and the Silurians from Doctor Who to make a race of "Saurials" that I used in many sci-fi games and then later used again in D&D. Plus it was easy to add in bits of UFOlogy to this with their Reptoids.
Roger E. Moore has a review of the Gen Con 18 designer's forum on Supers RPG in A Super-Powered Seminar. A brief history of supers games is discussed here and what the future mught hold.
The Marvel-Phile covers three heroes I know nothing about; Armadillo, Count Nefaria and Hyperion.
Ads...Convention Calendar...Wormy and Snarf Quest.
Dragonmirth gets in a dig at 60 Minutes.
Issue #103 was not a bad issue, just not a memorable one for me. Some memorable articles and a tantalizing article on AD&D 2nd Ed.
Curious about what White Dwarf was doing at the same time? Check out my White Dwarf Wednesday for issue #71.
Wednesday, August 9, 2017
Star Trek RPG Operations Manual
I am working on my limited run Trek game to start in October. I have decided on my base system(s). I am going with my "Black Star" idea with Starships & Spacemen as my main set of rules and adding in "Basic Era" ideas when and where I can. Nothing against White Star, and I will use it as well, I just want something closer to Trek than to Star Wars.
I also want to use material from the Basic Psionics book.
Here is what I have so far.
Since I am using this ship I wanted to honor it's genesis. So there is a mix, at least in the first adventure of Trek and Galaxy Quest. At least for the first act. THEN it becomes Trek. Or rather Trek if "Where No One Has Gone Before" was replaced by "Event Horizon".
Afterall it is good enough for Jason Issacs.
The Klatuu Nebula Shipyards is not only a nod to Galaxy Quest, is also a nod to "When the Earth Stood Still" and even a side nod to "Army of Darkness". Commander Taggart is now Commodore Taggart. Since I need a high-level Starfleet officer to get things moving.
The "pilot" episode deals with Taggert and his band of Thermian engineers having been given 22 derelict Ambassador class ships to retro-fit with the new Triberyllium Warp-13 drive. Many of the ships have failed and one has gone missing with all hands (trying not to be too Babylon 5 here) so now this ship, The Protector, is ready to go and Taggart has taken over command. There is one other ship that is functional, The Mystic (another nod to it's genesis).
Here are the books (so far).
The Core Rules.
The Lovecraftian Terror.
Mostly for the Mutants.
And Apes...in SPAAACE! Because why not.
While I have most of these in POD and Dead Tree retail versions, I wanted to print them out so I can scribble in my notes and make the changes I want. Make them all more "Trek".
For starters, I am converting everything to Metric. Starships are not measured in feet! They are measured in meters! I am going with the rough 5 feet = 1.5 meters. So I have to fix all of those first.
Plus I really like the idea of using the the Basic-era system for this. Star Trek, the shows not so much the RPGs, are usually fast and loose with skills. Data can do X, Y, and Z well because he is Data. The characters will be the same way. So simple ability checks are fine here.
Also, I need to add some Trek RPG material from various editions. Not sure what yet, but certainly some material from my FASA Trek books. I'll have to run them off on the copier for this.
I am setting it well past the TNG/DS9/VOY time. Though I would still like to use these uniforms somehow. Maybe I could do it 20 years before TNG. I am not really planning on using many races from TNG. I'll see what my players want.
The adventures will not really be Trek adventures per se, but more Call of Cthulhu ones.
Right now I am thinking a short run. Maybe five adventures. A mini-series really.
I also want to use material from the Basic Psionics book.
Here is what I have so far.
Since I am using this ship I wanted to honor it's genesis. So there is a mix, at least in the first adventure of Trek and Galaxy Quest. At least for the first act. THEN it becomes Trek. Or rather Trek if "Where No One Has Gone Before" was replaced by "Event Horizon".
Afterall it is good enough for Jason Issacs.
The Klatuu Nebula Shipyards is not only a nod to Galaxy Quest, is also a nod to "When the Earth Stood Still" and even a side nod to "Army of Darkness". Commander Taggart is now Commodore Taggart. Since I need a high-level Starfleet officer to get things moving.
The "pilot" episode deals with Taggert and his band of Thermian engineers having been given 22 derelict Ambassador class ships to retro-fit with the new Triberyllium Warp-13 drive. Many of the ships have failed and one has gone missing with all hands (trying not to be too Babylon 5 here) so now this ship, The Protector, is ready to go and Taggart has taken over command. There is one other ship that is functional, The Mystic (another nod to it's genesis).
Here are the books (so far).
The Core Rules.
The Lovecraftian Terror.
Mostly for the Mutants.
And Apes...in SPAAACE! Because why not.
While I have most of these in POD and Dead Tree retail versions, I wanted to print them out so I can scribble in my notes and make the changes I want. Make them all more "Trek".
For starters, I am converting everything to Metric. Starships are not measured in feet! They are measured in meters! I am going with the rough 5 feet = 1.5 meters. So I have to fix all of those first.
Plus I really like the idea of using the the Basic-era system for this. Star Trek, the shows not so much the RPGs, are usually fast and loose with skills. Data can do X, Y, and Z well because he is Data. The characters will be the same way. So simple ability checks are fine here.
Also, I need to add some Trek RPG material from various editions. Not sure what yet, but certainly some material from my FASA Trek books. I'll have to run them off on the copier for this.
I am setting it well past the TNG/DS9/VOY time. Though I would still like to use these uniforms somehow. Maybe I could do it 20 years before TNG. I am not really planning on using many races from TNG. I'll see what my players want.
The adventures will not really be Trek adventures per se, but more Call of Cthulhu ones.
Right now I am thinking a short run. Maybe five adventures. A mini-series really.
Tuesday, August 8, 2017
Witch & Witchcraft Reading Challenge: A Storm of Witchcraft
"All ministers and learned people knew that witches were real and that they had the power to harm."
A Storm of Witchcraft: The Salem Trials and the American Experience by Emerson W. Baker
This book has been sitting on my must read shelf since the year began. I have read the history of Salem and the Witch trails many times over the years and I still learn something new. This book is filled to brim with new information.
Many books like to focus on victims, and some even focus on "the afflicted"; those that accused their neighbors of witchcraft. Professor Baker though goes much farther than that and talks about the judges, the people in power and in particular the two Mathers, Cotton and Increase, the learned ministers at the center of this storm.
The term "A Perfect Storm" gets thrown around a lot, but here it is appropriate. There was so much going on here that made the witch craze happen here when it was dying out everywhere else. It really was the last gasp of a dying movement of the Old World in the New World.
It was the start of the end of Pre-American Puritanism.
In this book Salem and 1692 take on a level of cultural impact that the Gunpowder Plot of 1605 did in the United Kingdom.
The book is long, 400+ pages, and full of names. But those names belonged to people and those people left others behind. So Prof. Baker also delves into the impact these witch trials had on the new experiment that would become America.
This is easily one of those books you can read, do a little more research or reading on the subject elsewhere, and then come back to and learn something new still.
If I have one complaint, and that is way too strong of a word, it is that the last chapter was not long enough. I would have loved to have learned more about the cultural impact of 1692 on modern culture and how it shaped America. But that would be a complete other book.
Prof. Baker gives us not only a well researched and well-detailed book, he gives us a book that is easy to read and relate to. There was so much going on back in 1692 that we can relate to today.
The history of Salem is the history of America. The witch trials of 1692 are also part of America; our darker past that some (like the town of Danvers to a degree) would like to forget.
I also listened to the audio book. After listening to interviews with Prof. Baker I kinda wish he had narrated it himself.
You can find Prof. Emerson W. Baker on the web at his faculty page: http://w3.salemstate.edu/~ebaker/ and on Twitter: https://twitter.com/emersonwbaker
You can also read what he says about last year's "The Witch".
He also did an interview at Ben Franklin's World.
2017 Witch & Witchcraft Reading Challenge
Books Read so far: 17
Level: Crone
Witches in this book: None or dozens.
Are they Good Witches or Bad Witches: 25 innocent people lost their lives in the errors of 1692.
Best RPG to Emulate it: This is the sort of setting one can easily use in Colonial Gothic. In fact, I would call this book must reading for any CG player.
Use in WotWQ: Salem Villiage, or at least the popular notions of it, is the model I am basing the town of West Haven on. The relationship between Salem Villiage and Salem Town will be used as a basis for West Haven and East Haven. Though where Salem Town embraces their past today (and Salem Villiage is now Danvers, MA), it is West Haven that embraces their past.
A Storm of Witchcraft: The Salem Trials and the American Experience by Emerson W. Baker
This book has been sitting on my must read shelf since the year began. I have read the history of Salem and the Witch trails many times over the years and I still learn something new. This book is filled to brim with new information.
Many books like to focus on victims, and some even focus on "the afflicted"; those that accused their neighbors of witchcraft. Professor Baker though goes much farther than that and talks about the judges, the people in power and in particular the two Mathers, Cotton and Increase, the learned ministers at the center of this storm.
The term "A Perfect Storm" gets thrown around a lot, but here it is appropriate. There was so much going on here that made the witch craze happen here when it was dying out everywhere else. It really was the last gasp of a dying movement of the Old World in the New World.
It was the start of the end of Pre-American Puritanism.
In this book Salem and 1692 take on a level of cultural impact that the Gunpowder Plot of 1605 did in the United Kingdom.
The book is long, 400+ pages, and full of names. But those names belonged to people and those people left others behind. So Prof. Baker also delves into the impact these witch trials had on the new experiment that would become America.
This is easily one of those books you can read, do a little more research or reading on the subject elsewhere, and then come back to and learn something new still.
If I have one complaint, and that is way too strong of a word, it is that the last chapter was not long enough. I would have loved to have learned more about the cultural impact of 1692 on modern culture and how it shaped America. But that would be a complete other book.
Prof. Baker gives us not only a well researched and well-detailed book, he gives us a book that is easy to read and relate to. There was so much going on back in 1692 that we can relate to today.
The history of Salem is the history of America. The witch trials of 1692 are also part of America; our darker past that some (like the town of Danvers to a degree) would like to forget.
I also listened to the audio book. After listening to interviews with Prof. Baker I kinda wish he had narrated it himself.
You can find Prof. Emerson W. Baker on the web at his faculty page: http://w3.salemstate.edu/~ebaker/ and on Twitter: https://twitter.com/emersonwbaker
You can also read what he says about last year's "The Witch".
He also did an interview at Ben Franklin's World.
2017 Witch & Witchcraft Reading Challenge
Books Read so far: 17
Level: Crone
Witches in this book: None or dozens.
Are they Good Witches or Bad Witches: 25 innocent people lost their lives in the errors of 1692.
Best RPG to Emulate it: This is the sort of setting one can easily use in Colonial Gothic. In fact, I would call this book must reading for any CG player.
Use in WotWQ: Salem Villiage, or at least the popular notions of it, is the model I am basing the town of West Haven on. The relationship between Salem Villiage and Salem Town will be used as a basis for West Haven and East Haven. Though where Salem Town embraces their past today (and Salem Villiage is now Danvers, MA), it is West Haven that embraces their past.
Monday, August 7, 2017
Back From Vacation
Last week I took the week off. We were supposed to travel but a variety of circumstances killed that idea, chief among them we thought one of our bunnies, Amy, was pregnant.
I also picked up that cool looking "The Witchcraft Reader". Full of classic tales of witches and witchcraft. Yes, that is a naked witch riding a giant bat monster and holding a snake.
We played a lot of Blue Rose and Blue Rose/DragonAge. It is becoming my oldest son's favorite game and he has even run a few more sessions.
We went to The House on the Rock and Steampunk Invasion at the Bristol Renaissance Faire.
The biggest thing we did though was...Nothing. That's right I took a complete mental vacation. No reading. No writing. Just enjoyed not doing anything for the first time in a very, very long time.
Though my wife and I gave Game of Throne another chance and we binged all 6 and half seasons.
As of this morning, I am all caught up with the rest of you! I don't think I'll add much to my games because of this, some things are just best to enjoy as-is rather than what they can offer me elsewhere. Though I would not count out a possible Basic Witch write up for Melisandre.
Instead, we did a bunch of mini-vacations mostly up to Wisconsin.
I hit up Noble Knight Games and FINALLY re-bought a World of Greyhawk Boxed set. I now have completely restored my original collection of *D&D books.
I hit up Noble Knight Games and FINALLY re-bought a World of Greyhawk Boxed set. I now have completely restored my original collection of *D&D books.
I also picked up that cool looking "The Witchcraft Reader". Full of classic tales of witches and witchcraft. Yes, that is a naked witch riding a giant bat monster and holding a snake.
We played a lot of Blue Rose and Blue Rose/DragonAge. It is becoming my oldest son's favorite game and he has even run a few more sessions.
We went to The House on the Rock and Steampunk Invasion at the Bristol Renaissance Faire.
The biggest thing we did though was...Nothing. That's right I took a complete mental vacation. No reading. No writing. Just enjoyed not doing anything for the first time in a very, very long time.
Though my wife and I gave Game of Throne another chance and we binged all 6 and half seasons.
As of this morning, I am all caught up with the rest of you! I don't think I'll add much to my games because of this, some things are just best to enjoy as-is rather than what they can offer me elsewhere. Though I would not count out a possible Basic Witch write up for Melisandre.
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