From the Bookshelf of Sword & Sorcery: "An earthier sort of fantasy"

Swordsmen in the Sky
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Why we're reading this
Great sampling of what the sword and planet genre is all about!

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What Members Thought

Charles
Jul 17, 2008 rated it it was amazing
Shelves: fantasy
Swordsmen in the Sky: My favorite fantasy collection of all time. This is the collection that, more than anything, made me want to write Sword & Planet stories. Contains: Swordsman Of Lost Terra by Poul Anderson, People of the Crater by Andre Norton, The Moon That Vanished by Leigh Brackett, A Vision of Venus by Otis Adelbert Kline, and Kaldar, World of Antares, by Edmond Hamilton
Richard
Mar 19, 2016 rated it it was amazing
After such a long time searching locally I have finally found my own copy of this book. I actually found it on eBay for a very reasonable price and the seller was local! Local like in the same small town. Ecstatic!

As a long time fan of Frazetta, I have to say that the cover Rocks! Although the title is mostly a misnomer, I enjoyed every story. Swordsman of Lost Terra by Poul Anderson is probably my favorite with it's post apocalyptic setting. People of the Crater by Andre Norton is a lost world
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NOLA Bert
Aug 04, 2025 rated it it was amazing
Swordsmen in the Sky is a fantastic science fantasy anthology with stories by Poul Anderson, Andre Norton, Leigh Brackett, Otis Adelbert Kline, and Edmond Hamilton. All of these authors were first reads for me, despite owning books by Anderson, Norton, and Brackett. I read Brackett’s novelette in this anthology a few years back to celebrate her birthday, but I reread it again when I decided to read the entire anthology. My inspiration for this read was a recent Swords & Wizardry campaign that I ...more
Derek
Dec 27, 2008 rated it really liked it  ·  review of another edition
Notable for containing some rarely-reprinted stories. In particular, "Kaldar, World of Antares" is the first of the Stuart Merrick adventures and is only otherwise available in an expensive hardcover collection.

This is a selection whose diversity belies the (awesome) title.

"Swordsman of Lost Terra" is written in a heavier, more literary or epic style, touched with strangeness. Its setting is not revealed until well into the story.

"The People of the Crater" is more of a lost-land scientific roma
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Jason Waltz
wrote one review already, and as often happens in the Goodreads app, it failed to post. not rewriting the whole thing again. here's a summarized version:

Anderson - probably the strongest tale in the whole book, definitely the most lyrical w/a great hero, lots of swords
Brackett - exciting tale and locale, good characters, sort of ends in a whimper
Norton - my favorite story, exciting, harrowing, energetic, mysterious, ends with a slight rush and disappoinment
Kline - weak story, wondering why it ap
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Jason
Dec 08, 2009 marked it as to-read
Garham
Feb 01, 2014 marked it as to-read
John Adkins
Feb 15, 2015 marked it as to-read
Shelves: ace-e-books
David
Oct 14, 2015 marked it as to-read
Shelves: fantasy, collections
Aran
Dec 08, 2015 marked it as to-read
S.E. Lindberg
Oct 09, 2016 marked it as to-read
Jason
Oct 10, 2016 marked it as to-read
Greg
Jan 21, 2017 marked it as to-read
Clint
Jan 21, 2018 marked it as to-read
Jordan
Jan 25, 2018 marked it as to-read
Keith
Apr 15, 2008 rated it really liked it  ·  review of another edition
Shelves: science-fiction
Evan
Nov 12, 2013 rated it it was amazing  ·  review of another edition
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Sword & Sorcery: "An earthier sort of fantasy"