Sword & Sorcery: "An earthier sort of fantasy" discussion
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What are you currently reading?
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Jason
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Jun 04, 2022 10:21PM

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It's great. 👍"
It is. Looking forward to when he can fill out a collection of Mortu & Kyrus tales.

It's great. 👍"
It is. Looking forward to whe..."
Me too. I was part of his Kickstarter for the new bigger, better re-released hardcover edition of Thune's Vision and will try and support him whenever I can including any production of more Mortu & Kyrus tales. Would make for a great film too.

It's great. 👍"
It is. Look..."
Nice. I almost bit the bullet on that but the overseas postage is a killer nowadays. I see it's up for preorder on Amazon but $50 for the hardcover and $30 for the paperback is a bit rich for me atm. Still very much considering it though, might be worth a mint in the future.

Trust me it's worth it. If you want I will send you $20 to pitch in. I tried to turn on several of my S&S friends to Schuyler when he first came on the scene but only one checked him out. I think his work is classic-in-the-making. A special talent for utilizing the less-is-more attitude; sparse words, clever ideas and subtle storytelling, not always trying to be epic in nature. I can only compare him to Moorcock, Howard, Vance and Leiber. And maybe Asimov only his genre is pure SF.

Hey, I appreciate the offer but that's not necessary. I probably will end up buying a copy.
I've been a backer of Cirsova Magazine from the first issue and if memory serves me that's where his "The Gift of the Ob-Men" story was first published. Definitely a highlight in that first issue. Cirsova has been a fantastic source of new and old authors of ye olde pulp.
EDIT: But yeah, I do think he is this generations second coming of the old pulp masters. High praise maybe but one author to very much support.

Picked up a series and was plowing through.

Cirsova is a great magazine. I need to pick up the rest of the issues I don't have. I have another book with a Schuyler Hernstrom story in it but I can't remember which story or what book it is at the moment. It believe the story was reprinted in Thune's Vision, I'll have to look into it as it's been awhile. Good talk!
Just finished Cyrion, the last of my current spate of Tanith Lee, and am starting The Worm Ouroboros by E.R. Eddison.

The Worm of Ouroboros is amazing. The prose makes Dunsany and Gene Wolfe look like Forgotten Realms authors (though I love Forgotten Realms stuff) but it is very enjoyable. Hope you have a good time with it!
Michael Fierce (aka Darth Fierce) wrote: "The Worm of Ouroboros is amazing. The prose makes Dunsany and Gene Wolfe look like Forgotten Realms authors (though I love Forgotten Realms stuff) but it is very enjoyable. Hope you have a good time with it!"
..."
Yeah, it's a remarkable book. I think this is actually my third time through it? After once in the late 90s/early 00s and a second time in 2014.
The challenge is that I'm trying to get through it by EOD Saturday because I'm going to be taking part in a book discussion Sunday morning. Things might be ... tight ...
..."
Yeah, it's a remarkable book. I think this is actually my third time through it? After once in the late 90s/early 00s and a second time in 2014.
The challenge is that I'm trying to get through it by EOD Saturday because I'm going to be taking part in a book discussion Sunday morning. Things might be ... tight ...

Yeah I didn't notice that until after my comment. I looked at the review an hour later.
Awesome about the discussion! Hope it goes well. The Worm of Ouroboros is like a handful of soul gem pebbles of William Morris, Lord Dunsany, James Branch Cabell, and J.R.R. Tolkien. It obviously made a big impression on Gary Gygax as well.

The only flaw I think the book has it is that the introductory bits with Lessingham and the talking bird can be ignored completely.

The only flaw I think the book has ..."
👍

(Not up on Goodreads yet)
Best story thus far AND possibly best story in all WHETSTONE issues so far is Charles Dooley's "A Song from the Sea"! Great, great Howardian Loftcraftian storytelling. Now let's see how strong the next story is.

Just finished this non S&S book. Review: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...
During a Writing Class last year, author Howard Andrew Jones suggested I read Donald E. Westlake (aka Richard Stark)'s Parker series to (1) to add variety to my steady dose of Sword & Sorcery [this is a dark, noir crime thriller .... not fantasy adventure] and (2) experience reading economical writing and optimal information flow (i.e., "reveals").
As HAJ indicated, this was not only fun to read, but it is a fine example of an entertaining book that also demonstrates highly-efficient prose; each sentence delivers only what it has to, and Stark/Westlake perfected when to add detail (i.e. Brand names or key adjectives). Also perfected, chapter-to-chapter information reveals; the reader only receives what they need, but five chapters in you'll realize that each section unravels key context from all the prior ones.


Just finished this non S&S book. Review: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...
During a Writing Class last year, author Howard Andrew Jones suggested I re..."
Stark's Parker series is...stark (sorry), but electric. It's also quite dark. Tough to like such a nasty piece of work as the "protagonist" he created in Parker.
For me, my current non-S&S reading is another of Ellis Peter's Brother Cadfael series. Its setting certainly makes it feel very fantasy-esque.

It's a high time for crime around here.
Brother Cadfael's murder mysteries, MI6 spies, and organized crime are infecting us!
I wonder if these other genres are represented in the New Edge S&S topics/books at all.
Brother Cadfael's murder mysteries, MI6 spies, and organized crime are infecting us!
I wonder if these other genres are represented in the New Edge S&S topics/books at all.
S.E. wrote: "It's a high time for crime around here.
Brother Cadfael's murder mysteries, MI6 spies, and organized crime are infecting us!
I wonder if these other genres are represented in the New Edge S&S topi..."
If not, they should be!
Brother Cadfael's murder mysteries, MI6 spies, and organized crime are infecting us!
I wonder if these other genres are represented in the New Edge S&S topi..."
If not, they should be!




Everything about this slim and powerful ten-story anthology just clicks for me, it is great and versatile sword and sorcery entertainment. Memorable characters, wonderful vistas, mysterious locations and lots of twisted and foreboding magic, and lone adventurers trying to make their own way in a dark and dangerous world, typically just making it by the skin of their teeth. There are many obvious nods to the familiar favorites of the S&S genre, but most of the stories have enough to offer to surpass any sort of pastiche.
I liked this one so much I secretly wished for it to be longer (it is under 200 paperback pages, barely 180 pages), and now I hope there is going to be another volume by the same editors, put together with the same degree of care and dedication. Either that or even ten-story volumes each for several of the new heroes introduced in this short volume. It really is pulp adventure fiction in the sense that you are left wanting more and expecting there to be more issues, maybe one per month.
Just starting The Origin of Storms, the concluding volume in Elizabeth Bear's Lotus Kingdoms trilogy.
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