December 2025
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    My husband really enjoys D&D. I'm looking for a book with the adventuring vibe with maybe a little wackiness. He loved the movie with Chris Pine, so anything similar to that would probably be a hit!

    by thatonehumanoid

    8 Comments

    1. BelmontIncident on

      There are actual Dungeons and Dragons novels. The most popular are the Drizzt series and the Dragonlance series. Those mostly aren’t funny, though.

      The Philosophical Strangler by Eric Flint is a pastiche of 70s fantasy with world building that feels like a dungeon master trying to improvise fast enough to keep the game going and just barely staying ahead of the players. He decided to make it free a long time ago to get more people interested in the rest of his work

      https://www.baen.com/the-philosophical-strangler.html

      Speaking of pastiche that feels like DnD, Terry Pratchett was a dungeon master before he decided to try doing for fantasy what Blazing Saddles did for westerns. The Colour of Magic was successful enough as a parody. The next forty-one books in Discworld got better.

    2. Technocracygirl on

      The Company of Strangers series by Melissa McShane is a D&D campaign with the serial numbers filed off. The series starts with *Company of Strangers* and goes through six books. They’re a very light read, but I love them and have read through them at least twice.

      The Guardians of the Flame series is also D&D-esque, (college students playing the game are transported to their game world) but I never made it through the first book. Your husband’s tastes may differ from mine, though.

    3. SarahwithanHdammit on

      “Guards! Guards!” by Terry Pratchett, if he already isn’t into Discworld.

      There’s also official D&D novels. The Drizzt series by RA Salvatore is very fun. “Dragons of Autumn Twilight” is a classic.

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