Lord of Dragons: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
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* [[Loveable Rogue]]: Thermidar the Rogue.
* [[Loveable Rogue]]: Thermidar the Rogue.
* [[Luke Nounverber]]: Gurney Half-Swede.
* [[Luke Nounverber]]: Gurney Half-Swede.
* [[No Pronounciation Guide]]: The month "[[Punctuation Shaker|Mrgf\roth, (pronounced Mrr-gf-\-roth)]]".
* [[No Pronunciation Guide]]: The month "[[Punctuation Shaker|Mrgf\roth, (pronounced Mrr-gf-\-roth)]]".
* [[Punctuation Shaker]]: Elves, dwarves.
* [[Punctuation Shaker]]: Elves, dwarves.
* [[Pungeon Master]]: Terrible puns fly thick and fast in the land of Dagoran.
* [[Pungeon Master]]: Terrible puns fly thick and fast in the land of Dagoran.

Revision as of 22:11, 6 February 2016

Lord of Dragons is a eighteen-part book series written mostly by Ephraim B Smain, a popular science fiction and fantasy author who wrote the first book in the series, To Serve A Dragonlord, in 1961, when he was fifteen years old.

Such is what the Lord of Dragons wiki claims. In truth, Lord of Dragons is a wiki-based parody of high fantasy novels, inspired by Penny Arcade's Epic Legends of the Heirarchs: The Elemenstor Saga wiki. It was created because Air Of Mystery and co-writer 4rcit4 wanted to write something with no established canon, whereas if they wrote in ELotHTES they would have to follow existing rules. (ELotHTES did rather kindly put up a short article about LoD.

The wiki is partly about detailing the books in the series (which parody High Fantasy tropes), Smain's life (disastrous) and the ongoing efforts to create a Film of the Book (which parodies moviemaking in general).


Tropes used in Lord of Dragons include: