Wow, a fantasy book that isn’t
Young Adult? It’s a little unsettling, actually, that so many entries in the
fantasy genre (and this blog) are geared to a younger audience. Perhaps not
that surprising, since literary works are considered more “adult” and
“serious”, but even sci-fi gets to explore adult themes more widely. Aside from
Game of Thrones and The Lord of the Rings, much of fantasy falls under YA or
romance. I’m hoping that novel series like Forgotten Realms will keep cropping
up and drawing in older readers in search of stories both insightful and
entertaining.
The appeal of these Dungeons and Dragons books, like its
tabletop origins, is that people across the age spectrum with a love for
fantasy can appreciate and enjoy them. That’s certainly the case with
Salvatore’s The Legend of Drizzt series, or at least his first chronological
installment, Homeland. There’s
good-old action and lore to excite the action junkie and lore nerd, but he also
teases out some social commentary about oppressive societies that use fear and
propaganda to control its population, and how suffocating it is to live in
them, unable to escape. While the world of the drow (dark elves) in
Menzoberranzan bears witness to obviously questionable morality, it can make us reflect on those aspects in our own culture an outsider might find
objectively horrifying but we accept on a daily basis.



