Ah, the Elder Scrolls, games chock-full of
lore. And Skyrim is no different. Hidden amongst the draugr and dragons is a
plethora of books full of very important and incredibly niche details. But with all the spellcasting and shouting
you must do as dragonborn, who really has the time to read all those books. I DO. APPARENTLY. I read every book in Skyrim in order to answer
the eternal question, āShould you read every book in Skyrim?ā And Iām here to give you my top five recommendations
of books, here in my SKYRIM BOOK REPORT. Skyrim book report! How many books are there, really, in Skyrim? After all, there are only eight people credited
as writers on Skyrim. Those eight people are responsible for every
quest, every voice acting line, every response you can give to an NPC. How much time do they have to write all those
other books? A lot! Because they wrote this many books. This many books. *pained grin* Or at least they wrote most of them because
a few of them have been grandfathered in from other Elder Scrolls games. Before I get into the nitty gritty, let me
explain my process on how I did this Skyrim Book Report. I printed out every book in Skryim, and then
I spent multiple eight-hour days reading EVERY. SINGLE. BOOK. I whittled it down to 338 books because I
didnāt include journals or diaries. Everyone knows that self-published doesnāt
count. In total, thatās 571 pages, five and a half
point font, over three hundred and sixteen THOUSAND words. I had two reactions to this. My first reaction was, āWow.ā This is an incredible amount of world building. To write 300,000 words that could essentially
be skipped over while still having the full Skyrim experience, itās amazing, and itās
a level of world building that could only exist in an interactive medium. And for that, I commend you, Bethesda. My second reaction to this, was WHAT THE FUCK. HEY TODD? WHAT THE FU- In my Skyrim Book Report, I will
be discussing: *smack* Thatās a smash cut. Hopefully. If I do my editing correctly. 338 books. Uh, actually, 337, I just realized, um, over
here, Songs of Skyrim, I put both of them in there, but thereās a revised edition. I lied. Itās just 337 books now. Obviously, I donāt have time to synopsize
all of these, and believe me, you wouldnāt want to watch that even if I could. Iāve split them into categories to make
this a little bit easier. First up, historical books! These book titles you see rolling up the screen
are all biographies or histories. What I categorized as histories was anything
that had big historical dates in them, explanatory histories, or pretty much anything that was
boring. Historyās so BORING. UGHHHH. J.R.R. Tolkien *kiss* did the world a disservice
by making every single fantasy writer think that they need to chronicle every goddamn
minute of their world in order for it to be legitimate. I donāt give two shits about a king who
lost a war 700 years ago. *snoring noises* Get OUTTA here! Some of these biographies are actually pretty
interesting. But a lot of them are written like The Chronicles
of Nchuleft. I didnāt tab it out ācause itās a shitty
story. āIt happened in Second Planting (P.D. 1220)
that Lord Ihlendam, on a journey in the Western Uplands, came to Nchuleft; and Protector Anchard
and General Rkungthunch met him there, and Dalen-Zanchu also came to the meeting. They talked together long by themselves; but
this only was known of their business, that they were to be friends of each other. They parted, and each went home to his own
colony.ā RIVETING. Ugh. Historyās so boring. Iām done with this. Next category: Instructional books! These are all field guides or basic recipes
about how to make good armor or what flowers go in which potions. At best, they are in-fiction instructional
books. At worst, they are so obviously trying to
get you to go do specific things. Pulls you right out of the fiction! Cāmon man. Thatās all Iām gonna say about that. Everyoneās favorite: the academic books. Fun fact about academic books that I learned
in college is that no one has ever enjoyed writing
or reading an academic paper. WHYāD YOU PUT IT IN A VIDEO GAME. Mythicaaaaal stories. Itās kind of weird to differentiate things
between myth and history, especially in this world where you can talk to demon princes. I split these two up because these are very
boring and these are slightly more palatable. Theyāre more like creation myths, or theyāre
just like random stories that are fun to read, so theyāre getting closer to good fiction. The poetic and dramatic. Everyone knows that poetry and theatre are
meant to be seen and not read. And you have NO IDEA how much it pains me
that I do not have time to do staged readings of all these. Oh my GOD I would have loved that. We have āeh.ā What genre is āeh?ā Itās the catchall. Um, these tend to be accounts, kind of like
medieval fantasy op-eds. So Iā¦ I just put āem here. EH! Weāre done with these now, soā¦ Get outta here! Finally, we have 59 books that I would consider
good fiction. GooooOOOD fiction. What I did here is I gave myself three criteria
about what would make good fiction in the realm of Skyrim. Number one, does it help build the world around
us? Number two, does it give us an interesting
or different perspective on that world? And number three, is it good? Now you might say, āBrian, what gives you
the right to say what is good fiction?ā I READ ALL 338 YA DINGUS. BELIEVE ME WHEN I SAY THAT THESE WERE THE
ONLY GOOD ONES. THIS IS ALL IāM QUALIFIED TO DO NOW. I need a drink. *deep breath* Okay! Thereās still 59 of these, so I obviously
canāt summarize all of them, but I have left five off, and they are my top five books
of Skyrim. So weāre gonna talk about those. Number five, Advances in Lockpicking. Now Advances in Lockpicking is actually an
instructional book. But I think it does more than just the other
instructional books, where you open them up and suddenly youāre better at lockpicking,
because itās written by a thief in a very interesting voice. Thereās a great ending line for this book:
āSome thieves canāt read. If you canāt read, get someone to read this
book to you. It will make more sense then.ā Thatās great. I think thatās a much more fun way than
saying, āHere is how you pick a lock. This is what this set of armor is.ā Better than instructional. Just good fiction. Number four, Palla. In a world where crazy creatures exist, how
do you make fiction that is compelling that people can just kind of experience in their
own life. Palla is a necromantic romantic book. Itās a story about a man who sees this beautiful
statue of a woman fighting a beast and falls instantly in love with this woman. Turns out, sheās dead! From fighting that beast. He decides to get into necromancy to bring
her back from the dead. I kind of donāt want to ruin the surprise
for you. It manages to tell an interesting story while
also introducing these ideas of monsters and necromancy. Itās kind of weird, but itās very well
written. Iām gonna go ahead and put up three and
two. Why do I put up the Argonian Account and Feyfolken
at the same time? Turns out, itās written by the same fictional
author: WAUGHIN JARTH. This oneās for you, Waughin! Iām a big Jarth head! Heās not actually in the story at all, I
couldnāt find any instance of, like, him as an NPC. So I really hope heās in the next one. Because I want to meet Waughin. I just want to meet Waughin Jarth. These ones were not actually written specifically
for Skyrim. They were grandfathered in. But they do an incredible job of building
the world around you. The Argonian Account is actually the second
story in a series all about Decumus Scotti. This is kind of like the Hobbit of Tamriel,
where weāre taking this unassuming character and thrusting them into this completely foreign,
amazing landscape, except instead of a hobbit, it is a midlevel bureaucrat. Itās full of screwball comedy and wonderful
worldbuilding about the Black Marsh which is where all the Argonians live. You have to fast travel by being eaten alive
by a worm. Thatās great. I want to see that whenever we go to the Black
Marsh. Itās so flavorful, and thatās why Iām
a Jarth head. Feyfolken. Itās a story about a scribe whoās terrible
at his job but gets this enchanted quill that forces him to be amazing. Sends himself into this madness, and he kills
himself at the end of the book, spoiler alert. But thatās not what this story is really
about. Itās an interesting fiction that teaches
you about different Daedric princes, and which ones could have caused this specific enchantment
on the quill. Thatās good worldbuilding! I am interested in the story! You told me something that I can learn about
the world. I had a good time reading Feyfolken! Jarth, ya did it again! And that leaves us with the number one book. Itās not The Lusty Argonian Maid. I feel like I should broach this subject. Iāll tell you why I didnāt include it
in my good fiction list, and itās not because Iām a prude, who doesnāt love a little
erotic lizard fiction? *OOH COME ON BABY* The reason I didnāt include
The Lusty Argonian Maid as one of the best pieces of fiction is because itās SEVEN
ACTS LONG. Seven acts? There is no way you can manage to maintain
that level of erotic tension for seven acts. Thatās like five and a half hours! As a person who has done one or two plays
in my life, thatās just unfeasible. Okay? Iād like to see them try. ~I would like to see them try~ *OOH COME ON
BABY* Before I go to number one, I gotta go get a flu shot. This is not a joke. Itās important to get your flu shot. Alright, Iām back. The number one piece of fiction in Skyrim,
not Waughin Jarth, Iām sorry. Itās Beggar, Thief, Warrior, King. Itās four books, actually. But itās all part of Eslaf Erolās story. It is completely fiction even within the fiction
of Skyrim. The reason I put it first is because itās
the only book that was legitimately hilarious. I straight up chortled. *chortle* Thatās what I did. In real life. Thatās amazing. The writing style of these four books is just
naturally hilarious. There are so many bland, cookie-cutter stories
in Skyrim that follow the same set up, twist, punchline. This doesnāt have that. Itās just a good story. One of these writers was just flexing, and
I think thatās wonderful that a writer had a chance toāwithin the fiction of Skyrimāwrite
something thatās just naturally funny. You should all go home, onto your computers,
boot up Skyrim, find these four books, and then read them, in order. Itās worth it! Thatās my quest, for you in Skyrim. 300 gold points. Thatās it! Thatās it, thatās all of the books. So like, what did I learn from reading all
338 books of Skyrim? Surprisingly, a whole lot. Like, there are two main takeaways that I
pulled from this. Number one, this is a masterclass on how to
write effective flavor text. Between all of these, historical, instructional,
the good fiction, and, you know, the iffy fiction. This is a way to learn what to do and what
not to do. Obviously, not everyone is going to connect
with certain types of flavor text. Iām sure thereās a lot of people that
disagree with me and think that the historical is the most important flavor text. And you know what? They are valid. And theyāre wrong. And they always seem to find my comment sections. When you take something good like Feyfolken
which teaches you about the Daedric princes, but in an interesting way, it really shines
in comparison to the three and a half million biographies of Barenziah. You donāt even see them in Skyrim. I donāt care about Barenziah. ITāS BORIIIIIII- But not like Feyfolken! Thatās really interesting and effective. Also it just teaches you about all these wonderful
forms of fiction. If youāre a fiction teacher, like, teach
your kids with Skyrim! TEACH THE KIDS. WITH SKYRIM. I got a creative writing degree. Thatās all I have to say about that. Second takeaway, this is a wonderful teaching
device about unreliable narrators. So many of these histories are negating other
ones. This is a wonderful way of showing people
you need to read everything if youāre going to get the whole picture. I read everything. I am the keeper of the picture. Thatās every book in Skyrim. So itās time for us to revisit that ever
present question, āShould you read every book in Skyrim?ā NO! WHAT? HOW COULD YOU WATCH THIS WHOLE 10+ MINUTE
VIDEO AND THINK THAT I WOULD SAY ANYTH- WHAT? NO! I BORE THIS BURDEN! FOR YOU! DONāT READ THEM! NO! Please donāt read them all. DONāT READ THEM! You can read the top five, thatās fine. GRRRRR. HOW DARE YOU JETTISON MY GIFT! DONāT READ THEM! NOOOOOOOOOOO If you want to see me keep doing things like
this, make sure to hit that subscribe button. And now for a staged reading of The Sultry
Argonian Bard. Pat: I could never perform your request. BDG: Oh! Is it too fast for you. Pat: I fear I may damage myā¦ instrument. BDG: Ah, but you seem to handle it so well
my darling. Pat: My lady you flatter me. BDG: Well it is such a LARGE and MAGNIFICENT
piece.
Fact: the cameras switch back and forth 337 times in this video.
Hey, Todd! What the fuck?!
So, I know nothing about the people who made Skyrim but playing through it I got the feeling "Oh, so this is what it's like when an English major is in charge of creating a game". That said, I enjoyed the game just fine but I do agree with the guy's second reaction: "What the fuck!? No seriously, what the fuck??*"
Gilbert has a job?
Can someone watch this 14 minute long video of the guy reading all 337 books of skying so I don't have to so I don't have to?
Holy
JUMP
cuts
BAT
Man!
FTFY, I read ALL 337 pamphlets in skyrim...
EH!