Midnight reviews Dragonlance Legends by Margaret Weis and Tracy Hickman

Last week Midnight talked to Sprinkles about Dragonlance Chronicles by Margaret Weis and Tracy Hickman. Today he is excited to be talking about the sequel trilogy, Dragonlance Legends. The trilogy, consisting of three books (Time of the Twins, War of the Twins, and Test of the Twins) was originally published in 1986. The edition Midnight is posing with in the photos below is the fortieth anniversary edition, published in 2026.

Midnight reviews Dragonlance Legends by Margaret Weis and Tracy Hickman.
Midnight reviews Dragonlance Legends by Margaret Weis and Tracy Hickman.

Sprinkles: So here we are, Midnight, talking about the next trilogy in the Dragonlance universe.

Midnight: Yes. Marshmallow has had some very busy weeks and so I am filling in for the time being.

Sprinkles: And we are grateful for that. And this is another book you really like, right?

Midnight: Yes. I have many fond memories of this trilogy. I think I like it even better than the first one.

Sprinkles: Really? That is interesting. Can you explain why?

Midnight: It explores the relationship between the brothers Majere, the enigmatic wizard Raistlin and his good-natured and protective twin brother Caramon. Tagging along with them is Tasslehoff Burrfoot, a halfling of sorts who has a habit of borrowing things from others without asking.

Sprinkles: Some might call that stealing.

Midnight: Some might. Tasslehoff is a fun character, and he was often a source of comic relief in the first series. But here he often keeps the story moving, and inserts some occasional light-hearted moments in between periods of dark drama.

Sprinkles: What dark drama? Can you say something about that? You told us about evil dragons in your earlier review. Are they still causing trouble in this book?

Midnight: The dark queen has been prevented from conquering the world in the first trilogy. So this trilogy does not focus so much on the large-scale good-versus-evil, saving the world kind of plot. Instead, it focuses more on whether Raistlin can be rescued from the darkness himself.

Sprinkles: You almost make it sound like a psychological drama. Where one of the main characters is losing his soul and maybe his brother is trying to help him fight to keep it.

Midnight: I guess it is kind of like that, but with a lot more action and high fantasy. It is a lot more interesting than just a psychological drama”. Raistlin was always physically weak but smart and powerful with magic. Despite his frailty he had incredible ambition and confidence in his abilities. Let’s just say that throughout the first series, it’s not clear whether he will embrace the darker side of his ambitions.

Midnight is reading The Dragonlance Legends by Margaret Weis and Tracy Hickman.
Midnight is reading The Dragonlance Legends by Margaret Weis and Tracy Hickman.

Sprinkles: That sounds intriguing. And also in the meantime, they are traveling all over the world, right?

Midnight: Well, it starts out in a familiar place, where we find that Caramon has not taken well to settling down after the war from the first series. He is in a bad place emotionally, after the conflicts with his brother in the first series. His old friend Tasslehoff visits him and finds him in a sorry state, a pitiful shell of his former self. They go on a quest that will not only restore Caramon to his former self but hopefully will also redeem his wayward brother.

Sprinkles: So that quest is what the traveling is all about?

Midnight: It is not so much traveling geographically but they travel through time. They go back three hundred years, to the time before the Cataclysm, a world-altering event that set the stage for everything to come.

Sprinkles: Wait, so there is time travel here. And this is not science fiction.

Midnight: Not science fiction. Definitely fantasy. What is fascinating is that they return to legendary times, spoken of only in terms of myths and legends in the first series. I should also mention that one of the new characters that travels with them is Crysania, a good priestess who is determined to save Raistlin’s soul.

Sprinkles: I am guessing there is a love triangle or something?

Midnight: Of sorts, but it is not mushy like that. I think it is clear from the start that Crysania is determined to prevent Raistlin from becoming the ultimate force of evil that he could become. But she is blinded by her naivete and optimism.

Sprinkles: Hmm, that is a pretty detailed plot setup Midnight. I hope it has intrigued some of our readers.

Midnight: Yes, if you make it to the end, you’ll know all about how important bunnies are to the plot.

Sprinkles: Oh now, they have to read the book! And they really should. I really enjoyed reading them myself. One after another. It was hard to stop in between the books; it was so engaging.

Midnight: Yep. It is a very addicting mix of high fantasy and drama, written in plain and accessible language.

Sprinkles: No Tolkien, we are saying.

Midnight: No. it is not Tolkien, but like all works of the high fantasy genre, it owes much to the professor.

Sprinkles: And of course you love Tolkien too. I know. Anyways, I think this might be a good place to wrap up this review. What do you think?

Midnight: I agree. I must go feed.

Sprinkles: Are we doing the creepy vampire thing again?

Midnight: Infer what you will, my dear Sprinkles.

Sprinkles: Okay. I will do that. Is there something you would like to tell our readers as we end this?

Midnight: A bunny such as myself does not do simple catch-phrases and sound bytes. But I will say this: Farewell, dear reader. Until such a time as the Black Bunny deems it fit to grace the world with his august presence.

Midnight loves reading and rereading The Dragonlance Legends by Margaret Weis and Tracy Hickman, and bids readers farewell, until such a time as he deems it fit to grace the world with his august presence.
Midnight loves reading and rereading The Dragonlance Legends by Margaret Weis and Tracy Hickman, and bids readers farewell, until such a time as he deems it fit to grace the world with his august presence.

Caramel reviews America As It Happened: A Moment-by-Moment Journey Through Time, From Prehistory to the Present Day

Today Caramel is reviewing America As It Happened: A Moment-by-Moment Journey Through Time, From Prehistory to the Present Day, a neat book published in 2026. As usual Sprinkles is taking notes and asking questions.

Caramel reviews America As It Happened: A Moment-by-Moment Journey Through Time, From Prehistory to the Present Day.
Caramel reviews America As It Happened: A Moment-by-Moment Journey Through Time, From Prehistory to the Present Day.

Sprinkles: So today we are talking about another book of facts. 

Caramel: Yup. This is a book full of facts!

S: So tell me a bit about it. 

C: Well, it is big and yellow and heavy. And smells kind of like newspaper but a bit fancier. 

S: Those are all correct descriptors for the book. Even the smell. I agree with you. It does smell like newspaper but as it is on somewhat thicker and higher quality paper, it does also feel a bit fancier. 

C: Of course that is intentional. Because the whole book is meant to look like newspaper pages. The idea is that each page shows you the front pages of a newspaper from a specific time in American history. 

S: Well, they are kind of fictional, right? I mean, in the sense that probably no newspaper actually printed these things. But the content is supposed to be factual. 

C: Yes, true. I don’t think anyone was printing newspapers back in 15,000 BCE. But there is a news piece titled “Land Bridge From Asia Under Threat” for that date. And there was not even an America back then. I mean it was definitely not called America. 

S: You are right Caramel. But I like the idea, definitely. The title is “America As It Happened” and newspapers report on events as they are happening, so it makes sense. 

C: Yep.

S: So tell me a bit more. You mentioned the land bridge and that was way back in time. Is that the earliest thing that the book mentions?

C: No. The very first thing is “Stalking Giant Sloths” and it is dated 21,000 BCE. It is saying that a community of hunter-gatherers stalked and hunted giant sloths. And then there are a few other articles all before 1600 but with lots of time between each. Of course we did not keep written records of what happened back then, so they only have a few things to tell. But then from 1600 on, things get busier. Each century gets its own section. And each section is about twenty to forty pages or so. 

S: So then there is the prehistory and then 1600-1700, 1700-1800, 1800-1900, 1900-2000?

C: Yes. And the last section is what has happened since 2000. Of course that is the most important one because I was born in that century. 

S: A lot of other young bunnies would agree, I am sure.

Caramel is reading America As It Happened: A Moment-by-Moment Journey Through Time, From Prehistory to the Present Day.
Caramel is reading America As It Happened: A Moment-by-Moment Journey Through Time, From Prehistory to the Present Day.

S: The book was published in 2026. So it gets us to today?

C: Kind of. The last item is “The Land of Liberty Turns 250”, so that is July 4, 2026. So it goes even beyond today!

S: Cool! I saw that there were entries for quite a lot of the important historical events that I can remember, and a lot of earlier events I knew about. But there were quite a lot of things I did not know. Did you learn anything new from this book?

C: Of course. I am a very young bunny. And even though I know a lot of history, there has been a lot of history before me. And a lot of things I know about but maybe not enough. For example I know about the Ford Model T, but the article on it was a lot more detailed than what I knew. For example, I didn’t know that the first factory was able to build only 11 cars a month. So learning that was cool. 

S: Great! I found it fun to flip through the pages of the book myself. What else can we tell our readers about the book?

C: Hmm, let me think. Maybe we can tell them that the bottom of each page has a continuing timeline, with smaller items for more specific things that happen that are important but did not get the flashy headlines. And at the end of the book there is a glossary. That is kind of like a dictionary, where some of the important big words get definitions so you don’t have to find a dictionary yourself.

S: Yeah I saw that. And the definitions provided are kind of simplified. I think the book is intended for younger bunnies, so they define words in somewhat simpler terms. 

C: I saw that they defined anarchist as “a believer in anarchism. This is the idea that society should be organized without leaders and that people should work together because they want to, not because they are forced to”. That must be simplistic then, because that sounds kind of like when young bunny friends get together and play. And people seem to think anarchists are bad, but the way they define it does not sound too bad. 

S: Yeah, it can work for a group of four or five young bunnies, not to have any leaders or organizing systems, but when you have a lot more bunnies involved and a lot more things to coordinate, things can get really unwieldy without at least a somewhat rigid structure. And throughout history, some folks who called themselves anarchists resorted to violence, so there is that, too. Wikipedia has a decent article on the topic. So yes the glossary is intended for younger bunnies so it does simplify a lot of things. Technically they are accurate but because they have to be so simple, they do miss out on some details and nuance. 

C: Still, they can be helpful when reading. I guess if one is curious or confused they could look things up on Wikipedia. 

S: I agree. Overall the glossary is helpful, I’d say. 

C: Me too. 

S: So Caramel, maybe this is a good time to wrap this review up. 

C: Sure. Wednesdays are always school nights. 

S: Yep. So what would you like to tell our readers?

C: Stay tuned for more book bunny reviews!

Caramel enjoyed reading America As It Happened: A Moment-by-Moment Journey Through Time, From Prehistory to the Present Day and believes he will continue to enjoy looking through its pages every now and then.
Caramel enjoyed reading America As It Happened: A Moment-by-Moment Journey Through Time, From Prehistory to the Present Day and believes he will continue to enjoy looking through its pages every now and then.

Midnight reviews Dragonlance Chronicles by Margaret Weis and Tracy Hickman

Today Midnight talks to Sprinkles about Dragonlance Chronicles, a classic fantasy trilogy from 1984-1985, written by Margaret Weis and Tracy Hickman. The copy he is posing with in the photos below is the fortieth anniversary edition, collecting all three books in one beautiful volume, published in 2025.

Midnight reviews The Dragonlance Chronicles by Margaret Weis and Tracy Hickman.
Midnight reviews The Dragonlance Chronicles by Margaret Weis and Tracy Hickman.

Sprinkles: So Midnight and I are here, talking about a giant classic of the fantasy genre.

Midnight: Actually, this giant book I am posing with is not as large as it looks. I am just very small. And it is a recent anniversary edition that brings together the three books of the Dragonlance Chronicles trilogy.

Sprinkles: Okay, tell us about the three books then.

Midnight: These books actually began as novelizations of pre-designed Dungeons and Dragons adventures (called modules). I believe that the series of modules and the whole promotional campaign was designed to recenter the Dungeons and Dragons experience around dragons.

Sprinkles: Ooh, we all love dragons in this family!

Midnight: Indeed, are not rabbits really dragons, just smaller and furrier?

Sprinkles: I am sure Caramel would love that!

Midnight: However the Dragonlance novels became very very popular, in large part due to the memorable characters and the dramatic story line. It does not have the literary aspirations of Tolkien, and as such, is a much easier read.

Sprinkles: I must agree. I read these books and loved them! With Tolkien I have not been as successful. Yet. I am going to read The Silmarillion, after your review last week.

Midnight: I will ensure that you do. It would be most unwise to disappoint the black rabbit.

Sprinkles: Okay, I think I am supposed to feel intimidated here. Let us say I am appropriately intimidated. And move on to the review.

Midnight: Sure. The Dragonlance Chronicles is what might be described as a straightforward good-versus-evil, save-the-world story line. To a large extent this is true. This is no Game of Thrones, filled with morally gray characters.

Sprinkles: I do not think I’d say Game of Thrones characters are morally gray, I’d say most of them are straight-out bad people. But anyway I think I get what you mean. In this series, there are bad people and there are good people trying to fight them.

Midnight. Yeah. The main plot revolves around a party of adventurers who are trying to prevent the ultimate triumph of the big bad goddess of evil dragons who wants to rule the world.

Midnight is reading The Dragonlance Chronicles by Margaret Weis and Tracy Hickman.
Midnight is reading The Dragonlance Chronicles by Margaret Weis and Tracy Hickman.

Sprinkles: So tell me about your favorite character in the series.

Midnight: Perhaps my favorite character is the only one of the main heroes who is morally gray. I am talking about the wizard Raistlin, a sickly and frail young man of great talent and aspirations. His twin brother Caramon is a powerful and good-natured warrior and they make an interesting pair.

Sprinkles: The Wikipedia article about him says that he is both a protagonist and an antagonist. I had not heard that said before about any other fictional character.

Midnight: As I said, he is morally gray. In fact Raistlin and Caramon proved so compelling that the authors wrote a second trilogy, Dragonlance Legends, centered around them and their complicated relationship.

Sprinkles: Oh, maybe you will review those books, too, some time.

Midnight: Most definitely.

Sprinkles: So tell me a bit more about this goddess of evil dragons.

Midnight: Her evil dragons have reawakened and are causing trouble in the world once more. The good dragons are nowhere to be seen, leaving the people of Krynn, the world of the books, at the mercy of the evil dragons and the Draconians, a race of dragon-like humanoids, who appeared with the rise of the evil dragons.

Sprinkles: No bunnies anywhere?

Midnight: In fact fans of the series will recognize the significance of the bunnies, or rather, of a particular “bunny”, to the relationship between the twins. But that will have to wait for the second trilogy. For this trilogy, bunnies might be lurking in the background. But they are never not there, of course. We often lurk in the darkness, with humans oblivious to our plans.

Sprinkles: Okay, Midnight. Thank you for that ominous reminder. But you know a lot of young humans read this blog, so we do not want to scare them.

Midnight: If they knew how big I was, they’d probably not be scared. But okay.

Sprinkles: What else would you like to tell us about Dragonlance Chronicles?

Midnight: I’ve read and reread this series many times since I was a young bunny. It is a good read, high adventure in a world of high fantasy. The characters are very colorful and concrete; you get to know them really well, at least as well as the authors want you to get to know them, of course.

Sprinkles: So all in all, we both agree that these are great books to read. I read them really fast even though they are quite long as a whole. The adventure is fascinating and captivating.

Midnight: Yes.

Sprinkles: Okay, midnight. Than you for coming out of your hiding place for this review. I think this will be a good place to wrap things up. Anything else you would like our readers to know?

Midnight: There is also an anniversary edition of Dragonlance Legends, and I look forward to reviewing that at some point in the future.

Sprinkles: That will be great, Midnight, thank you. I will look forward to it!

Midnight: Till then, I bid you all adieu.

Midnight loves reading and rereading The Dragonlance Chronicles by Margaret Weis and Tracy Hickman, and bids readers farewell, until such a time as he sees fit to reappear.
Midnight loves reading and rereading The Dragonlance Chronicles by Margaret Weis and Tracy Hickman, and bids readers farewell, until such a time as he sees fit to reappear.

Caramel reviews The ABC Murders by Agatha Christie

Sprinkles is a huge Agatha Christie fan, so of course she was thrilled to see Caramel carrying around The ABC Murders, originally published in 1936. They are talking about the book today. As usual Sprinkles is taking notes and asking questions.

Caramel reviews The ABC Murders by Agatha Christie.
Caramel reviews The ABC Murders by Agatha Christie.

Sprinkles: I was so excited to see you reading an Agatha Christie book, Caramel! She is the best! 

Caramel: Yeah, I can see that point of view, she is a pretty good writer.

S: Yay! So you liked the book! I mean, I know there are a lot of folks who would not consider Christie a serious literary figure, but I always enjoy her books and I think she is great at what she does. 

C: Yup, she kept me guessing almost all the way to the end. 

S: Was this your first Agatha Christie novel?

C: Nope. I had also read And Then There Were None when Marshmallow was reviewing it. 

S: Ooh, that was a good one too. So, okay, back to The ABC Murders. I am sure I read this book but it must have been decades ago. And I do not remember much of the plot. Can you tell us a bit about it? 

C: So Hercule Poirot receives a suspicious letter signed by “ABC”.

S: Oh, so this has Poirot as the main detective! That is cool! Go on.

C: Yes, so this letter tells him that there will be a murder in Andover, and then someone actually dies there, so Poirot goes to Andover to figure things out. 

S: Poirot is Belgian, and often works with some British guy who writes about him, right? Kind of like Dr. Watson of Sherlock Holmes

C: Yes. The main narrator is Arthur Hastings, and the book is written like he is recounting the story rather than living through it. 

S: Apparently Hastings appears in quite a lot of Poirot mysteries. I suppose it is good to have a character like Hastings or Watson to tell us these stories about the genius detectives they are hanging out with and admire so much. This way the stories unfold naturally and we are in the dark about what is going on in the minds of these mysterious crime solvers until the very end. 

C: Yeah, it’s like that, ‘cept Hastings ole’ fellow has quite the thinker on emself-

S: Wait, what are you saying? Please speak normally. You are not a British gentleman from the nineteen twenties. 

C: Awww, ok, but that was fun! And I am only about a hundred years late! And not quite British… Anyways, the only difference is that Hastings is actually somewhat smart so he also figures some things out. Still it is clear to everyone including himself that he is not as smart as Poirot and is surprised when Poirot solves everything. 

S: Yup, that agrees with my previous understanding of their relationship.

Caramel is reading The ABC Murders by Agatha Christie.
Caramel is reading The ABC Murders by Agatha Christie.

S: So tell me a bit more. Could you tell the book was almost a hundred years old?

C: Well, it is exactly ninety years old actually. The book read fine to me. I did not think they were using old fashioned words or anything. And it is supposed to be happening in between the two world wars, and I could not even tell that, really. 

S: Yes, I think Christie’s language is clean and simple enough for us to not even notice it. Every now and then she uses a phrase that is unfamiliar to me, or she mentions something historical to me but contemporary to the story characters, but most of the time, I cannot tell at all that she wrote these things such a long time ago. 

C: Yeah, that checks out. Though it seems that in these books the detective and other people sometimes use words that today’s people might not understand. Like some words or phrases that refer to the railway map in Britain at the time. Of course I didn’t know that till they explained what it was they were talking about. But most of the time, I could totally forget this was supposed to be happening in the 1920s. That was even before your time Sprinkles!

S: Yes, of course it was before my time. It was even before my parents’ time, Caramel. 

C: Oopsie, or is that what you want me to think?

S: Okay, let us put aside any implications that I might be undead or-

C: Or a lich?!

S: Okay, let us not go there. 

C: Sure, that’s what a lich would say.

S: Caramel! These seem like ideas more fit for Midnight’s reviews. 

C: Oh yes, Midnight does like his fantasy books. But I like them too. 

S: I know. You like playing Dungeons and Dragons, and various versions of it. 

C: Actually these days, I prefer Pathfinder, which is really just D&D 3.5 edition. 

S: True. But Agatha Christie tells stories that are in some sense a lot simpler. She manages to find evil in mainstream people living regular lives. Seems like she has no need to go fantastic. 

C: That may be true for the books she has already written. But maybe when she begins to write new books, from BEYOND THE GRAVE? 

S: Okay, I have a feeling it is getting too late for us to be talking about books sensibly. 

C: That’s lich talk! Okay, okay, don’t get mad, I am kidding. But yes, you are probably right, it is getting late and it is a school night… 

S: Yep. So let us wrap up this review. Do you think you might read other books by Christie at some point? 

C: Sure. They are fun to read, and I do love solving puzzles!

S: Sounds great to me. Okay then, Caramel. What would you like to tell our readers?

C: Stay tuned for more book bunny reviews!

Caramel enjoyed reading The ABC Murders by Agatha Christie and recommends it to all bunnies who enjoy a little bit of detective mystery.
Caramel enjoyed reading The ABC Murders by Agatha Christie and recommends it to all bunnies who enjoy a little bit of detective mystery.