Sword & Sorcery: "An earthier sort of fantasy" discussion
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What are you currently reading?

Thanks for the heads up about the Sinbad book! I was able to get books one and three for kindle for a couple of bucks and book two is only $3 and change in paperback!"
Same. I need to organize my reading list better. So many books, so little time.

*No doubt the overall vibe is humorous Fantasy but if you think you wouldn't like it you might want to think again. The first page:
"Viv buried her greatsword in the scalvert’s skull with a meaty crunch. Blackblood thrummed in her hands, and her muscular arms strained as she tore it back and out in a spray of gore. The Scalvert Queen gave a long, vibrating moan… and then thundered to the stone in a heap.
With a sigh, Viv slumped to her knees. The persistent twinge in her lower back flared up, and she dug in the knuckles of one huge hand to chase it away. Wiping sweat and blood from her face, she stared down at the dead queen. Cheers and shouts echoed from behind her.
She leaned closer. Yes, there it was, right above the nasal cavity. The beast’s head was twice as wide as she was—all improbable teeth and uncountable eyes, with a huge, underslung jaw—and in the middle, the fleshy seam she’d read about.
Jamming her fingers into the fold, she pried it open. A sickly golden light spilled out. Viv slid her whole hand into the pocket of flesh, curled her fist around a faceted, organic lump, and yanked. It came free with a fibrous ripping sound.
Fennus moved to stand behind her—she could smell his perfume. “Is that it, then?” he asked, only a little interested. “Yep.” Viv groaned as she hoisted herself to her feet, using Blackblood as a crutch. Without bothering to clean the stone, she stuffed it into a pouch on her bandolier, then propped the greatsword on her shoulder."

Thanks Kirk! Still assembling stories, once I have about six I think I can put out a new collection. Suggestions for at title would be welcome!



(love the cover)


Written twenty years apart, I look forward to navigating the tonal whiplash going from a book that was fun but read like one of the ones Moorcock talked about writing in a work week, then picking up the paycheque and spending it at the pub on the same Friday, to what I expect - going by The Fortress of the Pearl - will be a much more literary effort.

Written twenty years apart, I look forward to n..."
Moorcock bounces back and forth as my favorite author along with Joe R. Lansdale (mattering on my mood) and have read at least 40 of his books and can assure you his earlier non-literary Fantasy is superior in overall achievement and entertainment and though the later novels are really good they lack that pulpy Howardian center to his storylines he exemplified earlier on. Mastering the written word does not equate as being better as I'm sure you know. Which is something I wish even some of my own GR friends realized like Bill Kerwin and modern day author Forrest (who wrote one of my very favorite stand-alone Fantasy novels) though I suppose it's more a matter of taste for the most part. To old farts like me, "it is known". 🤫


https://scottoden.wordpress.com/2022/...
*With intentions to create a Cozy Conan flash fiction piece Scott turned this into both something else and something more. About a normally mean-spirited thieving cutthroat - a reflectively evil cast Conan-type character - in a world very Howardian in nature. The story evolved into a touching tale about Gebal and a dog in a dark alleyway. **Hoping Scott writes more of these!


Savage Realms Monthly: April 2022: A collection of dark fantasy sword and sorcery short adventure stories

SLT really stuck to my ribs. An easy book to recommend, which I do wholeheartedly: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...
Since it was May the Fourth last week, I started Star Wars: The High Republic: Light of the Jedi by Charles Soule, the first of the High Republic novels (set a couple hundred years before the events of the movies).

https://www.tor.com/2022/05/11/the-br...
*I see S&S group members, Scott Oden and C.T. Phipps, have read and commented on it but all Conan fans will want to read this cool article.

I started Guy Gavriel Kay's All the Seas of the World, which is obviously not S&S, but it's less not S&S than most of his other books, at least so far. And I'm enjoying it immensely, as I've done with his other books.

Oh, very nice, will need to check this out!

My five-star review:
https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...
Finished All the Seas of the World, which was deeply good, and started Poul Anderson's Three Hearts and Three Lions, which I've inexplicably never read before.


In between short books I’m working through Andrew Roberts’s 900-page biography of Napoleon. So far it’s actually very readable.

In between sho..."
The Sailor on the Seas of Fate. Awesome. A favorite of mine since I was 11.


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Oh hell yeah! I'm most definitely grabbing this when it drops.