Where to Start with Tad Williams: A Reading Guide
Where to start with Tad Williams — whether to begin with The Dragonbone Chair or Stone of Farewell. A complete reading guide to the epic fantasy author.
Tad Williams (born 1957) is the American epic fantasy author whose Memory, Sorrow, and Thorn trilogy — The Dragonbone Chair (1988), Stone of Farewell (1990), and To Green Angel Tower (1993) — is one of the most influential fantasy series of the 1990s, establishing many of the narrative and tonal conventions that later shaped George R.R. Martin’s A Song of Ice and Fire. Martin has explicitly credited Williams as a primary influence; Williams’s work demonstrated that epic fantasy could sustain complex characterisation, political intrigue, and literary prose over thousands of pages.
Where to Start: The Dragonbone Chair (1988)
The essential Williams — and the first volume of one of the foundational epic fantasy trilogies. Simon is a castle scullion in the Hayholt, the seat of the high king of Osten Ard. He is lazy, dreamy, and unimpressive — the kind of hero who begins the story in the kitchen and will only gradually discover what he is capable of. When the old king dies and his son Elias takes the throne under the influence of the sinister priest Pryrates, something ancient and dark begins to stir in the kingdom.
Williams builds his world carefully and slowly. The Dragonbone Chair is the longest of the three volumes; it establishes Osten Ard in detail, introduces an enormous cast of characters, and traces Simon’s journey from the castle into the wider and more dangerous world. The Sithi — Williams’s elves — are alien in a way that Tolkien’s elves are not: older, stranger, not entirely sympathetic.
The trilogy’s great achievement is its treatment of time and history. Williams is interested in how a civilisation’s past determines its present: the ancient wars between humans and Sithi, the stories that have calcified into myths, the ways in which the present crisis is a repetition of old catastrophes. The three swords (Memory, Sorrow, and Thorn) are not simply magical objects but crystallised history.
For readers who love epic fantasy with literary ambitions, the Memory, Sorrow, and Thorn trilogy is essential reading.
Stone of Farewell (1990)
The direct sequel — darker, more expansive, and deepening both the world and the war. Must be read after The Dragonbone Chair; the trilogy concludes with To Green Angel Tower (1993).
Reading Tad Williams
Begin with The Dragonbone Chair — it is the only starting point. Read Stone of Farewell directly after; the trilogy forms a continuous narrative that requires all three books.
For the full Tad Williams bibliography, reviews, and biography, visit the Tad Williams author page on Editors Reads.
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Frequently Asked Questions
Where should I start with Tad Williams?
The Dragonbone Chair (1988) is the only starting point — the first volume of Williams's Memory, Sorrow, and Thorn trilogy, following Simon, a castle scullion who is drawn into a war for the survival of his kingdom when the new king makes an alliance with a dark power. One of the foundational epic fantasy series of the 1990s; George R.R. Martin has cited it as a direct influence on A Song of Ice and Fire. Stone of Farewell is the direct sequel.
What is the Memory, Sorrow, and Thorn trilogy about?
Memory, Sorrow, and Thorn is set in Osten Ard, a high fantasy world inspired by medieval Europe and Scandinavian mythology. When the old high king dies and his son Elias takes the throne with the aid of a mysterious advisor, a long-dormant evil begins to stir. Simon, an orphaned kitchen boy with hidden destiny, becomes entangled in the struggle of a deposed prince and a collection of other characters — a Tolkien-inspired ensemble — who must find three legendary swords (Memory, Sorrow, and Thorn) to prevent catastrophe.
What is Stone of Farewell about?
Stone of Farewell (1990) is the direct sequel — continuing Simon's journey and the wider war against the dark king Elias and his supernatural allies. The series expands its cast and deepens its world-building; Stone of Farewell is darker and more complex than The Dragonbone Chair. The trilogy concludes with To Green Angel Tower (1993), which was so long it was published in two parts.
How does Memory, Sorrow, and Thorn compare to Tolkien and Martin?
Williams's trilogy is explicitly post-Tolkien — it uses the same epic quest structure, the same ensemble of races (including the Sithi, his version of elves), and the same medieval setting, but approaches them with greater psychological complexity and a more consciously literary prose style. George R.R. Martin credits the trilogy with showing him that epic fantasy could explore morally complex characters and political intrigue at length; A Song of Ice and Fire would not exist in its current form without Memory, Sorrow, and Thorn. Williams predates Martin's series by a decade.

