Ratings7
Average rating4.1
In this new Laundry Files adventure the fate of the world will literally depend on the roll of dice... twenty-sided dice, that is. In 1984, Derek Reilly was just another spotty teenage dungeon master growing up in middle England. But then a secret government agency tasked with suppressing magical intrusions received a tip-off – and one midnight raid later, his life was turned upside down by the Satanic D&D Panic. Decades later Derek, now middle-aged and institutionalized, is a long-term inmate at Camp Sunshine, a center for deprogramming captured Elder God cultists. He’s considered safe enough to edit the camp newsletter, and he even has postal privileges – which he uses to run a play-by-mail game. After 25 years, Derek finally has reason to escape: a nearby D&D convention. While Derek’s D&D games were full of fictional elder gods and world-ending threats, a LARP game at the con is a dread ritual designed to summon a great evil into our world, and it’s up to Derek and his players to stop them. The fate of the world may depend on the contents of Derek’s magic dice bag. At the Publisher's request, this title is being sold without Digital Rights Management Software (DRM) applied.
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11 primary books17 released booksLaundry Files is a 17-book series with 12 released primary works first released in 2002 with contributions by Charles Stross.
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I've enjoyed the Laundry Files less and less with each new book. Somewhere along the line these stories have changed from original inventive pulp romps to a tired cynical sneer at...well, pretty much everything. God knows there is a place for that in this society, but it's just so wearying to read several hundred pages relentlessly discoursing on why everything is shit. This seemed to reach a peak with the New Management books, which were so biliously misanthropic I almost tapped out. Fortunately this one sees Stross trying to engage with the light-hearted side of the series some more. It's not perfect (parts of it smack far too much of nerd wish fulfilment for one thing), but it's given me hope that the series can turn a corner and that maybe there is some actual fun on the horizon.