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Lucy Maud Montgomery: Lan se cheng bao (Chinese language, 1992, Ke zhu shu fang)

302 pages

Chinese language

Published Dec. 30, 1992 by Ke zhu shu fang.

ISBN:
978-957-9050-99-9
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OCLC Number:
37798676

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5 stars (2 reviews)

At twenty-nine Valancy had never been in love, and it seemed romance had passed her by. Living with her overbearing mother and meddlesome aunt, she found her only consolations in the "forbidden" books of John Foster and her daydreams of the Blue Castle. Then a letter arrived from Dr. Trent and Valancy decided to throw caution to the winds. For the first time in her life Valancy did and said exactly what she wanted. Soon she discovered a surprising new world, full of love and adventures far beyond her most secret dreams.

50 editions

Review of 'Blue Castle Annotated' on 'Goodreads'

5 stars

Purchased the first printing of this book in 2004, and 17 years later the revisions keep getting better. It helps that this is my preferred way to play old school dungeons & dragons style games. This version also has a classic cover homage to the original AD&D.

Probably plenty of other sites will list what is updates; my favorite parts are the extended character classes (to level 24), the gorgeous color art and the aforementioned cover. The game system and rules are basically unchanged - and that's a good thing.

Dungeons and Dragons 3.5 edition was released at about the same time Castles & Crusades was released in a boxed set. While 3.5 improved on 3rd edition (and D20), there was a significant demand at that time for "old school" rules, a return to the 1st edition Advanced D&D. This game (and this book) scratched that itch in the perfect …

Review of 'Blue Castle Annotated' on 'Goodreads'

5 stars

This is a fairly complete collection of game mastery advice, and unlike most game master's guides, completely unnecessary for play. But oh so worth it!

Castles & Crusades came out a few years after the D20 open game license came about. The team took that open reference and took a step back, making a game quite like 1978's Advanced Dungeons and Dragons. In that game, the Dungeon Master's Guide contained all the needed charts for combat, conditions and treasure - a required resource for game play. Castles & Crusades used the D20 model and encapsulated all that in the basic rules - no lookup charts required. In fact, for more than five years, Castles & Crusades consisted of only a player manual and the book Monsters & Treasure.

The Castle Keeper's Guide collected the extra bits, from play style to game advice, from environments to equipment. Advanced Dungeons & Dragons …