Dragon Ash
Charlie Brown
Lu par Charlie Brown





The Shazam Brothers are performers, jugglers, illusionists and con artists. They are also gnomes, part of the tribe that lives on the Little East End of Isenstock. When they accidentally steal the most powerful artifact of the city, the Quigley Dagger, they risk unleashing the greatest evil known.
"Dragon Ash" is a satirical fantasy that blends sword and sorcery with screwball comedy, Tolkein as performed by the Marx Brothers. In the tradition of Fritz Leiber, Robert Aspirin and every "Abbott and Costello Meets" movie, this book combines high action, low comedy and a salty attitude for those looking for something completely different.
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Chapitres
Dragon Ash 01 | Lu par Charlie Brown | |
Dragon Ash 02 | Lu par Charlie Brown | |
Dragon Ash 03 | Lu par Charlie Brown | |
Dragon Ash 04 | Lu par Charlie Brown | |
Dragon Ash 05 | Lu par Charlie Brown | |
Dragon Ash 06 | Lu par Charlie Brown | |
Dragon Ash 07 | Lu par Charlie Brown | |
Dragon Ash 08 | Lu par Charlie Brown | |
Dragon Ash 09 | Lu par Charlie Brown | |
Dragon Ash 10 | Lu par Charlie Brown | |
Dragon Ash 11 | Lu par Charlie Brown | |
Dragon Ash 12 | Lu par Charlie Brown | |
Dragon Ash 13 | Lu par Charlie Brown | |
Dragon Ash 14 | Lu par Charlie Brown | |
Dragon Ash 15 | Lu par Charlie Brown | |
Dragon Ash 16 | Lu par Charlie Brown |
Critiques





By: Page
Audio/Narration: While the sound is fair and without static, the narrator seems to have over-performed the audiobook, treating the story instead like a Saturday morning cartoon. At times the narrator chooses to scream lines into the microphone and other times whispers lines; the volume is inconsistent. Writing: While the narration ...





By: Charlie
Page, I will not comment on your enjoyment of the book. That is a matter of taste. However, it is factually incorrect when you say that rape fantasies are carried out in this book. That is a grievous misreading of the scenes contained here and I cannot let that be ...





By: Pashka
Like a previous commenter, if this was not labeled as satire, I would have been put off. By the middle of the book, however, the Yiddish-isms and D&D parodies became my favorite part. If I was an editor I might recommend the satire be toned down in the first few ...





By: Em
Entertainingly enjoyable in a totally Laugh Out Loud kind of way! "Rape fantasy" commenter obviously missed the context. It's unfortunate that listener missed out on a great story telling! The satire from page one clearly sets the tone and the pace. Thanks for a adult listen ... It was just ...





By: Amaster
If this was not explicitly stated to be a satirical comedy, then I'd have a serious problem with it. Instead, my only real issue is that your accent makes it a little challenging to understand at times. Though I did enjoy the "chants" from the first episode and the neobarbarians.
How interesting!





Vermilliana
Fun story! light and amusing, with just the right level of darkness and cheese. Funny thing, the reader reminds me of someone I once knew...reads with the same cadence, sings with the same tones, which makes this production all the more entertaining. I miss that guy *lol*





By: Barry b
I feel some similar issues with previous posters. To those comments I would add that I find my mind wandering during what should be some funny and original material. Something missing in the flow of the work.
Hah, pretty dang funny!





potuc
If you enjoyed this, you should check out the webcomic named "Order of the Stick," it uses D&D humor in a D&D world. It does, however, have STICK FIGURES!!