Sword & Sorcery: "An earthier sort of fantasy" discussion
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What are you currently reading?
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Mary
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Dec 03, 2023 03:08PM

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Having finished The Crippled God last week, I'm finally finished with Malazan after a mere five months.
I followed it up with a couple issues of New Edge Sword & Sorcery Magazine, and have now started Ann Leckie's Translation State
I followed it up with a couple issues of New Edge Sword & Sorcery Magazine, and have now started Ann Leckie's Translation State
And now for something completely different: A Winter Pilgrimage: Being an Account of Travels through Palestine, Italy, and the Island of Cyprus, accomplished in the Year 1900.

Started The Book of Ile-Rien: The Element of Fire & The Death of the Necromancer, Martha Wells' new collection of two of her very early novels.


If you told me it was a lost Robert E Howard Story I think I'd have believed you. Out of and author I've ever read it was the closest to Howard's voice.

I finished The Book of Ile-Rien: The Element of Fire & The Death of the Necromancer and started The Earth is Flat: Tales from the Flat Earth and Elsewhere, a recent collection of Tanith Lee's heretofore uncollected Flat Earth stories.

Were you prompted by the SFWA's recently announced posthumous award to choose Lee for your current read? I have a book of hers that I've been meaning to read for years - maybe I'll start reading that shortly.
Greg wrote: "Were you prompted by the SFWA's recently announced posthumous award to choose Lee for your current read? I have a book of hers that I've been meaning to read for years - maybe I'll start reading that shortly.."
Kind of a confluence of circumstances -- that announcement, and Holly Black name-checking the Flat Earth books in an article up on Reactormag.com (the former Tor.com).
And I love Tanith Lee and the original five Flat Earth books are somewhere in my top five favorite series of all time, so the surprising thing is why I hadn't read this one already.
Which book of hers do you have?
Kind of a confluence of circumstances -- that announcement, and Holly Black name-checking the Flat Earth books in an article up on Reactormag.com (the former Tor.com).
And I love Tanith Lee and the original five Flat Earth books are somewhere in my top five favorite series of all time, so the surprising thing is why I hadn't read this one already.
Which book of hers do you have?

The book concerned is The Book of the Damned. Is that one you've read?
I didn't know that Tor.com had been renamed Reactormag.com. I see from the site that this occurred in January. It's unusual for a company to make such a big brand name change but there's an article about it so I'll have a read of that to find out why it happened.
Greg wrote: "The book concerned is The Book of the Damned. Is that one you've read?."
Yes, although not for many years. It's great -- a collection of stories (novelettes? novellas?) set in a sort of alternate version of Paris at various points in its history. Very decadent and gothic.
I only vaguely heard about the name change, but I think it was because they wanted to give themselves a bit of separation from TOR the publisher (since they spend so much time on the website talking about other publishers' books).
Yes, although not for many years. It's great -- a collection of stories (novelettes? novellas?) set in a sort of alternate version of Paris at various points in its history. Very decadent and gothic.
I only vaguely heard about the name change, but I think it was because they wanted to give themselves a bit of separation from TOR the publisher (since they spend so much time on the website talking about other publishers' books).

Yes, although not for many years. It's great -- a collection of stories (novelettes? novellas?) set in a sort ..."
The ISFDB says the book is a collection of three novellas. My copy is boxed with other books at the moment.
And that makes sense to try to separate the publisher from the Web site so that they can comment more freely on other publishers' books. Not sure if that will really make a difference if people know that Reactormag is owned by Tor.... :P

It [Children of Hurin] is grimdark AF.
Myself, I'm starting The City of Marble and Blood, which some people here might have heard of ... :)
Myself, I'm starting The City of Marble and Blood, which some people here might have heard of ... :)

How did you like the conclusion of the Vis trilogy?
Dariel wrote: "How did you like the conclusion of the Vis trilogy?"
I liked it! Had Tanith Lee's other best chariot race. Having said which, the linkage to the first two books was even more tenuous -- it's set about 100 years after Anackire, so there aren't any returning characters, and it mostly takes place on a smaller scale than the previous books. But I do recommend it.
I liked it! Had Tanith Lee's other best chariot race. Having said which, the linkage to the first two books was even more tenuous -- it's set about 100 years after Anackire, so there aren't any returning characters, and it mostly takes place on a smaller scale than the previous books. But I do recommend it.


Looks interesting - and the first book by a new author - so I've added it to my TBR shelf.

Myself, I'm starting The City of Marble and Blood, which some people here might have heard of ... :)"
Grimdark Tolkien sounds wonderful! :)
Also, I've added the first book in the Chronicles of Hanuvar series to my TBR shelf. Interested to see how this series develops.
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