tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1724254580047847936.post8545838134848092555..comments2024-03-27T20:09:00.283-04:00Comments on Tenkar's Tavern: Hawk & Moor - Initial Impressions (D&D History)Tenkarhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05159289652051155824noreply@blogger.comBlogger1125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1724254580047847936.post-21584021456536266392014-10-07T14:14:32.824-04:002014-10-07T14:14:32.824-04:00Hi! Since you keep mentioning my work in your note...Hi! Since you keep mentioning my work in your notes here...<br /><br />As a matter of policy, I don't write reviews, or usually even offer opinions, on other works about the history of D&D. H&M describes itself as a "Chaotic" take on the history of the game in contrast to the "Lawful" view presented in PatW. It adopts pretty much the opposite of PatW's method: it takes what appears in later interviews at face value, whereas PatW only treats contemporary primary sources as evidence. I think the author of H&M understands well that this means it's not really a reliable history, but something closer to a collection of folklore with, as you say, some speculation connecting its dots. I see value in that endeavor - aggregating the way that Gygax saw his work in hindsight from myriad blogposts and later articles into a single repository serves a useful purpose. On the other hand, that also unduly magnifies Gygax's and Arneson's activities (as the title itself suggests) and removes the community context that is crucial for understanding the origins of the game.<br /><br />PatW is not for everyone, and there is plenty of room for other voices in a discussion about this history. PatW was not designed to be breezily readable, it was designed to be pedantically correct - and to prove that it is correct to a skeptical audience. If that is not your priority, you can tell a very different than PatW does.Jonhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/04384006879763222011noreply@blogger.com