Sword & Sorcery: "An earthier sort of fantasy" discussion
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Is it as hilarious as it sounds? :P
For my money, Sword & Planet was never done better than Barsoom, especially The Gods of Mars, The Chessmen of Mars and A Fighting Man of Mars. (I linked to the editions I first read them in.)
Although I say that with the Haffner Press Leigh Brackett collections sitting unread on my shelf ...
Although I say that with the Haffner Press Leigh Brackett collections sitting unread on my shelf ...


Love Dray Prescot.
I did like the first few Gor novels, but they got unreadable later on. I'd find myself skimming whole sections of the book just to get back to some S&S action (instead of S&M).
Also enjoyed Mike Sirota's Reglathium series.
And, of course, Fritz Leiber, Michael Moorcock, Karl Edward Wagner, Jose Farmer, and anything Conan.
I do have a bunch of Prescot books sitting on the shelf also ... I tried Gor once, but even the first book just didn't grab me.
Hmmm ... As I'm thinking about it now, I'm also wondering if some of Tanith Lee's early novels might be classified as S&P -- I'm thinking specifically of The Birthgrave (which ends with (view spoiler) or The Storm Lord.
And also maybe some C.J. Cherryh -- the Morgaine books most obviously, but also some of her early SF like Brothers of Earth and Hunter of Worlds (Human Rebellion, #2).
Hmmm ... As I'm thinking about it now, I'm also wondering if some of Tanith Lee's early novels might be classified as S&P -- I'm thinking specifically of The Birthgrave (which ends with (view spoiler) or The Storm Lord.
And also maybe some C.J. Cherryh -- the Morgaine books most obviously, but also some of her early SF like Brothers of Earth and Hunter of Worlds (Human Rebellion, #2).






Charles wrote: "The Darkover series seems pretty mixed. Some are really pretty much SF. Many have a more Sword & sorcery feel to me than Sword and Planet, even though the setting would suggest S & P."
It's interesting that we had three distinct series (Darkover, Witch World and, to a lesser degree, Pern) that were all going at the same time and that were all kind of playing in that intersection between fantasy, sword & planet and SF.
It's interesting that we had three distinct series (Darkover, Witch World and, to a lesser degree, Pern) that were all going at the same time and that were all kind of playing in that intersection between fantasy, sword & planet and SF.



I never could get into the Darkover books. Pern knocked things out of the park for me. I have yet to try Witch World.

I heard the issue was that his editor finally stopped reining him in.
Loved the first 3 books. Liked the next 3 or 4. Then started disliking the series. I finally gave up around #11 or so. Too much skimming of the BDSM content to get to the smaller and smaller amount of S&S content.
Books mentioned in this topic
The Birthgrave (other topics)The Storm Lord (other topics)
Brothers of Earth (other topics)
Hunter of Worlds (other topics)
The Gods of Mars (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
Tanith Lee (other topics)C.J. Cherryh (other topics)
Leigh Brackett (other topics)
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