Here at The Silver Key I spend most of my time talking classic sword-and-sorcery, but I’ve been keeping track of some new releases that I thought were worth reporting on. My wallet will be feeling the pinch in the coming weeks.
Swords & Sorceries: Tales of
Heroic Fantasy: Volume 1. I’m really liking this old school cover by
Jim Pitts, and the editor Steve Dilks knows sword-and-sorcery. Looks like a
great new collection.
Necromancy in
Nilztiria by D.M. Ritzlin and The
Godblade by J. Christopher Tarpey, from DMR Books. DMR is the most committed publisher
of sword-and-sorcery today, republishing classic titles and issuing original
works. I haven’t been disappointed with Swords
of Steel or Heroes of Atlantis &
Lemuria, and Renegade
Swords, another purchase, is on my TBR pile. These two new titles look
excellent also.
New
Fafhrd and the Gray Mouser stories coming from Tales from the Magician’s Skull. I’m a subscriber to Tales from the Magician’s Skull and am interested
how they plan to handle these classic characters. Leiber had such a unique voice,
and it’s not clear if author Nathan Long will be using the characters to
tell new stories, or will try to imitate Leiber’s style (the way this release is
written I’m leaning toward the former). I’m on record as saying I have no problem
with pastiche, or writing new stories using classic characters, as long as they
are not passed off as works of the original author. Adrian Cole has done some
excellent work with new stories of Elak of Atlantis, for example.
Barbarians at the
Gates of Hollywood: Sword and Sorcery Movies of the 1980s. Black
Gate’s review by Fletcher Vredenburgh of this title convinced me I should
give it a shot. Other than Conan the Barbarian and perhaps a couple others, sword-and-sorcery’s
silver screen boom was uniformly terrible, but a detailed history of how this
phenomenon came to be is up my alley.
Robert E. Howard: A Closer Look (Hippocampus Press). An update of a 1987 title by Charles Hoffman and Marc Cerasini. Looks like a solid study. More Howard scholarship is always welcomed.