Guardians of the Flame

Guardians of the Flame is a fantasy series by Joel Rosenberg about a group of roleplaying college students who abruptly find themselves inside the world of their game, in the bodies of their characters. The first book, The Sleeping Dragon, depicts their attempt to return to Earth, and their later commitment to return. Theater student/huge fighter Karl Cullinane vows to end slavery in his new home and persuades his friends to join the crusade. The remainder of the series follows his efforts, and later. those of his son Jason.

Karl's colleagues, at least at the start, are history student Jason Parker and football hero Walter Slovotsky (the party thieves), engineering student Lou Riccetti and English major Andrea "Andy-Andy" Andropolous (the party wizards), crippled computer science major James Michael Finnegan (AKA the dwarf warrior Ahira), and Doria Perlstein (the party cleric); the gamemaster is a philosophy professor at the university.

Some of the tropes encountered include:
 * Addictive Magic: stated explicitly to resemble cocaine addiction - a little bit every now and then is okay, but use too much and it's a steep, quick decline into obsession, madness, and bad hygiene. Brutally demonstrated with, who keeps to a slow, safe, gentle progression, until dies, at which point she takes a flying leap off the slippery slope.
 * This may be the entire motivation of.
 * An Adventurer Is You: Each of the students becomes an archetypal role-playing hero, complete with the abilities and limitations appropriate to their level and class.
 * Another Dimension: The fantasy world that the students are sent to (and later returned to) in the first book.
 * Anyone Can Die: And how! Usually, one significant character per book bites it, but the biggest one has to be when sacrifices himself so the rest of his motley crew can escape a trap in the fourth book. Other hugely important deaths include      , and.
 * Berserk Button: James/Ahira's feelings toward his handicap, condescending people, and the name "Jimmy" from anyone except Walter Slovotsky.
 * The Big Guy: Karl Cullinane in his warrior persona. Also Walter Slovotsky, football player/party thief, in either persona ... big, beefy, and too good-natured to dislike.
 * Crowning Moment of Awesome: Ahira the dwarf freeing his berserker rage by recalling his Earthly life as the quadraplegic James Michael Finnegan.
 * Crowning Moment of Heartwarming: The liberation of Ellegon, an adolescent dragon who had been chained in a cesspit for 300 years, and the exultation he shows on his release.
 * Defiled Forever: Doria's view of herself after.
 * Earn Your Happy Ending: Big time. In the course of their quest to return to Earth,
 * Fantasy Gun Control: Subverted from the third book on, when engineering student Lou Riccetti works out how to recreate gunpowder weapons and give the fight for freedom a big edge..
 * Game Master: Dr. Arthur Deighton, philosophy professor, is a longtime GM who has this great new campaign he wants to try ...
 * Gladiator Games: Subverted, in that the Great Games of Pandathaway are not a sentence for slaves but actually a means for fighters to earn a few coins in between jobs. Participants can become quite wealthy if they fight well, or bet well.
 * He's Just Hiding: Performed in-universe with . His friends know that he's almost certainly dead, but they hold out hope, in part because he's such a powerful symbol for the resistance.
 * Humans Are Bastards: How Ellegon has come to view humanity after having been drugged, captured and forced to incinerate sewage for the last 300 years to keep himself from drowning in it. After his liberation by Karl, subsequent books find him modifying his views, saving his wrath for the slavers.
 * Ice Cream Koan: Slovotsky's Laws, an ever-growing list of Walter Slovotsky's humorous (and often accurate) observations about the world around him.
 * I Choose to Stay: James Michael Finnigan, after getting the chance to leave his crippled body and become the dwarf warrior Ahira.
 * The Library of Babel: The Great Library of Pandathaway, which makes the similarly-named one of Alexandria look sick. However, actually finding anything there can be quite expensive, especially if the librarians take a dislike to you.
 * Made a Slave: At one point, the party is captured by slavers intent on revenge for an earlier humiliation. Also part of the origin story for many of the people who are freed and/or recruited by Karl's band.
 * The Medic: Doria attempts to avert this trope -- she's sick of playing the healer, she wants to *do* something. She only agrees to play the cleric after winning the power to approve the others' characters, but gets conned into letting them all play who they want anyway.
 * Monty Haul: Averted. The GM tries to give the characters a big pile of magic items at the start to make the quest a piece of cake, but a panicky Lou accidentally blows them up with a Lightning spell.
 * Never Learned to Read: Though all the main characters are literate in English, everyone except the wizards and cleric finds themselves unable to read or write the language of their new home. As early as book two, this has been corrected.
 * Our Dragons Are Different: Ellegon, a young dragon who is fiercely devoted to Karl and deathly afraid of bows, despite his near-invulnerability, thanks to.
 * More specifically, dragons in this world are the typical extremely powerful western wyrms, save that they cannot afford to harrass humanity too directly because of a deathly allergy to a common herb named dragonbane which can be used to poison missile weapons.
 * Our Dwarves Are All the Same: Ahira, who pretty much follows the fantasy archetype.
 * Power Loss Makes You Strong: Lou Riccetti actually becomes more dangerous after.
 * Prime Directive: Utterly ignored - at least in the first four books, none of the "heroes" even stops to think if it's ethically or morally justified to introduce huge changes into the sociopolitical culture of another world. For example by introducing guns which triggers an arms race and trying to end slavery by violent assualts on slaver caravans rather than waiting to see if it comes about naturally as society evolves past the need or allowing of slavery. Not to mention setting up their own kingdom, forever changing geopolitical makeup of the world. Possibly justified by the fact that Arthur Deighton/Arta Myrdhyn had already seriously interfered (including fighting a massive magical duel that laid waste to an entire valley) though it's not made clear whether he's an earth or world native.
 * Rape as Backstory:
 * Red String of Fate: Karl and Andy-Andy. In later books, it's revealed that.
 * The Resistance: Karl and his friends decide to oppose the local slave trade and thereby set themselves up as this.
 * Spell Book: A subplot in the first book, after Lou/Aristobulus
 * Squishy Wizard: Played straight in the first book: Lou's wizard, Aristobulus, is elderly and frail, and neither he nor the younger Andy-Andy have any weapons or weapon training. In later books, Andy-Andy breaks with the trope and begins learning some useful combat skills.
 * Throwing Your Sword Always Works: Demonstrated and subverted at a crucial moment in the Great Games of Pandathaway.
 * Trapped in Another World: Karl and his friends have no easy way to return to Earth, short of finding a gate guarded by the world's oldest, strongest dragon.
 * Vancian Magic: All wizards and clerics in Rosenberg's world work by this rule, needing to either memorize spells or pray for them each day. This causes huge problems when the party's most experienced wizard  while the party's sole cleric.
 * You Fight Like a Cow: Subverted. Early in the first book, Karl starts to make a quip after cutting off an opponent's hand ... only to get grabbed from behind by another combatant in mid-joke. Lampshaded as Karl thinks to himself "You stupid idiot. You know better than to chat while a fight's going on." Only the timely arrival of Ahira with a crossbow keeps him from getting his throat cut.