Incredibly endearing and sentimental. Of Dice and Men underlines the history, brings everything back to games, and gives non-believers a chance to understand what it is that makes TTRPGs so powerfully fun.” —Rascal News
“An engaging book that fuses history and memoir. [Ewalt] tracks D&D's turbulent rise, fall and survival, from its heyday in the 1980s... to the 21st century.” —The Wall Street Journal
"The core of Ewalt’s story is his experience of role-playing games. He explains it about as well as anyone could, short of experiencing it yourself." —Seattle Times
“Dungeons & Dragons has been a huge part of my life. The book sheds light on the world of [D&D co-creator] Gary Gygax, and it also lets the reader into the mind of somebody questioning how cool this game is.” —Vin Diesel
"A fascinating history of D&D written by an author who authentically loves the game. Whether you know what d20 means or not you will love this book!" —Felicia Day, actress, producer, creator of The Guild and Geek & Sundry
“David Ewalt’s wit, insight and infectious love of D&D make him the perfect guide to the most significant game of the twentieth century. The book is a joy to read.” —Tim Harford, author of The Undercover Economist
"The best book I've read since the Monster Manual." —David X. Cohen, executive producer of Futurama
"A fascinating window into the storied history of fantasy pen and paper gaming. A must-read for anyone curious about the genre." —Dr. Ray Muzyka, co-founder of BioWare
“David Ewalt writes about the world of fantasy role-playing junkies with intelligence, dexterity, and even wisdom. (I am unable to speak to his strength, constitution, or charisma.)” —Ken Jennings, author of 100 Places to See After You Die and Maphead
“It's almost impossible to explain how Dungeons & Dragons works, and harder still to explain how it feels. This book comes as close as any I've ever read.” —Chuck Klosterman, author of Sex, Drugs, and Cocoa Puffs and I Wear the Black Hat
Forbes editor David Ewalt offers a genial history of Dungeon & Dragons and its impact on his own geek life. In the early1970s, two Midwesterners—a college student and a cobbler—drew elements from war games and fantasy novels to create the world’s most influential role-playing game. Within a few years of its genesis, D&D had become a flashpoint in the culture wars, as practitioners were accused of leading young men to murder, suicide and the church of Satan. D&D’s star soon faded due to corporate mismanagement and the rise of video game consoles, but recent years have seen a renaissance, which Ewalt charts, along with his own guilt-ridden return to the game. He follows a number of storylines, tracing the official history of D&D, his own introduction to the game, and his adult experiences as a player and reporter. Weaving the strands together are charming tales of his cleric character in a postapocalyptic America ruled by vampires. Oddly enough, the weakest sections of the book involve Ewalt’s descriptions of his life outside the imaginary dungeons. Nevertheless, this is a highly readable account of a game that seized the imagination of a generation and maintains its grip three decades later. (Aug.)
An engaging book that fuses history and memoir. [Ewalt] tracks D&D's turbulent rise, fall and survival, from its heyday in the 1980s… to the 21st century.
"The core of Ewalt’s story is his experience of role-playing games. He explains it about as well as anyone could, short of experiencing it yourself."
It's almost impossible to explain how Dungeons & Dragons works, and harder still to explain how it feels. This book comes as close as any I've ever read.
Dungeons & Dragons has been a huge part of my life. The book sheds light on the world of [D&D co-creator] Gary Gygax, and it also lets the reader into the mind of somebody questioning how cool this game is.
"A fascinating history of D&D written by an author who authentically loves the game. Whether you know what d20 means or not you will love this book!"
"The best book I've read since the Monster Manual."
Even audiences normally indifferent to D&D’s charms will find Ewalt’s overview witty and absorbing, and the game’s devotees will discover much here to revel in and quibble with.
David Ewalt’s wit, insight and infectious love of D&D make him the perfect guide to the most significant game of the twentieth century. The book is a joy to read.
Long before I made my mark in software, I was a pretty good Dungeon Master, and D&D has played a significant part in my life. In addition to covering much of the deep history of the game that I never knew, Of Dice and Men brought back tons of fond memories, and damned if it didn’t make me pull some dusty old rulebooks off the shelf at home.
David Ewalt writes about the world of fantasy role-playing junkies with intelligence, dexterity, and even wisdom. (I am unable to speak to his strength, constitution, or charisma.)
"A fascinating window into the storied history of fantasy pen and paper gaming. A must-read for anyone curious about the genre."
Even audiences normally indifferent to D&D’s charms will find Ewalt’s overview witty and absorbing, and the game’s devotees will discover much here to revel in and quibble with.
What's so fascinating about the video game Dungeons & Dragons? In answering that question, the author points to the sense of virtual cooperation that exists among its players. Ewalt narrates his own book with earnest enthusiasm and an occasional monotone. The book delves into the history of D&D, war games, and games in general. Passages that reflect the fantasy nature of the game are read dramatically in a richer, fuller voice by Mikael Nakamore, who gives them an epic quality. Ewalt depicts the world of games in a way that will intrigue anyone who's ever drawn a card or rolled dice for recreation. J.A.S. © AudioFile 2013, Portland, Maine
What's so fascinating about the video game Dungeons & Dragons? In answering that question, the author points to the sense of virtual cooperation that exists among its players. Ewalt narrates his own book with earnest enthusiasm and an occasional monotone. The book delves into the history of D&D, war games, and games in general. Passages that reflect the fantasy nature of the game are read dramatically in a richer, fuller voice by Mikael Nakamore, who gives them an epic quality. Ewalt depicts the world of games in a way that will intrigue anyone who's ever drawn a card or rolled dice for recreation. J.A.S. © AudioFile 2013, Portland, Maine
A child of the polyhedral dice returns to the fantasy game of his youth in a reverential history of the innovative pastime that has launched billions of role-playing adventures. Before Dungeons & Dragons, those with a fetish for alternate time periods and a visceral need to escape the banality of everyday life would wage tabletop war against each other in meticulously rendered re-enactments of history's greatest battles. Soon, however, even these highly orchestrated military clashes began to grow a bit tiresome--until someone threw wizards and other magical entities into the mix. Gary Gygax and Dave Arneson are the pioneering duo credited with merging old war simulations with a revolutionary gaming system that removed "winning" as the objective and encouraged imaginative players to keep their adventures going in perpetuity--or, at least, until their characters ran out of all-important hit points. Then again, in D&D, resurrection is never really out of the question, either. Forbes senior editor Ewalt adroitly parallels his return to D&D after years away in the "grown-up world" of journalism with the story of how Gygax and Arneson originally came together in the early 1970s to form Tactical Studies Rules, Inc.; the author also covers the ensuing split between the creators. The former thread, however, is by far the more engaging, as the rise and fall and resurgence of the D&D empire has been well-documented elsewhere. Hard-core D&D followers will find few revelations in Ewalt's personal dungeon crawl through TSR history. However, for those who don't know a Ranger from a Rogue or a Hobgoblin from a Halfling, the author's devotion to the game does much to illuminate role-playing's enduring power on mortal men and women. A serviceable history of Dungeons & Dragons coupled with an insightful look at the game's allure.