Hi everyone!
I recently got a bit of a book haul and I thought I'd show it off a bit.
First off is a trio of books I've got from a fantasy author called Charles Moffat. I've been meaning to get some of his work for a while and I'm not fully sure why its taken so long for me to actually invest in his books. He's a self published author and his work can be found on Amazon. He's written a good selection of books to choose from already.
I managed to get Wulfric the Wanderer: Black Monoliths of Al-Kazar and The Adventures of Wrathgar: The Sunken Castle by Charles Moffat and they're stand alone novellas, while I also have a collection of Lilith Bloodstone stories in the omnibus. They should be enjoyable and all are set in the same world of Korovia, that Charles Moffat has built. I've had a read of the first few pages of The Sunken City in my excitement and its enjoyable enough at the moment, but of course, I'm not in a position to make any actual comment on them yet.
A trio of books in the Korovia series by Charles Moffat |
Next up is a selection from DMR Books. These are off Amazon as well. I live in England, but ideally I would have got them off the DMR Books website, but it looks like they don't ship over seas anymore - at this time - because of some mishaps that have occurred during transit. Apparently, things have gotten lost. Anyone interested in they're books that live in america should still be able to purchase them from their website if they wish.
In this, Death Dealers and Diabolists has a good selection of stories and one by Keith Taylor of Bard fame. I've read one of the Bard tales before in Samhain Sorceries - also by DMR Books - and was suitably impressed.
Heroes of Atlantis and Lemuria has a number of stories by Manly Wade Wellman and Frederick Arnold Kummer Jr, and also a story finishing it off by Leigh Brackett who penned Jirel of Joiry.
There is also Wulfhere, by A B Higginson, which is set during Anglo-Saxon ruled Britain and was originally serialised in Adventure Magazine in 1920, and hadn't been published since. I've already started reading this in bed.
In the photo, there is also a book that is, as far as I know, out of print and which I didn't get from DMR Books. Redbeard by Michael Resnick is a tale from and is a tale of a mutant barbarian from a dystopian future, written in 1969.
Redbeard by Michael Resnick plus three anthologies by DMR Books |
Up next are a trio of anthologies edited by Nathaniel Webb. Rakehell is a collection of swashbuckling pieces that look suitably rip-roaring. Wyngraf Volumes 1 and 2 are advertised as cozy fantasy. These all came recommended to me and I'm really looking forward to reading them. I'm curious to find out just how cozy is cozy fantasy. Now that the winter months are settling in, this sounds very pleasant.
Rakehell Magazine and Wyngraf issues |
Next is Strawjack by Keith Page, which I bought as a recommendation from Amazon. I've had a flick through because I was curious to find that it was an A4 book and I found that it was a self-published graphic-novel.
I'd bought it under the presumption that it was another novella, but I was wrong, and pleasantly surprised. It does look very entertaining. Its a tale of Georgian highwaymen in the vein of Reverend Syn. It should be enjoyable, even if it I wasn't expecting it. That'll teach me to actually read the product description better.
Strawjack by Keith Page |
Another book I got off Amazon is The Averoigne Legacy by Pickman's Press. Its a collection - quick a large collection - of poems and tales based on the Averoigne setting that Ashton Clark Smith came up with, I have ordered the collected Averoigne tales by Clark Ashton Smith, but I got that off Ebay and it hasn't arrived just yet.
I have started reading this and I'm thoroughly impressed by Brian McNaughton's The Return of the Colossus. But more on that when I do a review. There must be about 35 tales and poems in this volume.
I'm familiar with Clark Ashton Smith's work, but its been a while since I read any of his work and of those stories I've read, only a small few must have been set in Averoigne, but I remember them most vividly. Clark Ashton Smith was one of those that was a pen pal of HP Lovecraft, Robert E Howard and Robert Bloch, so I'm looking forward to finishing this volume and the collection of Clark Ashton Smith's own tales set in the dark woods of Averoigne. I think I have also, many years ago, read Lovecraft inspired tales published in anthologies by Pickman's Press before, but its hard to tell. Some of the layout and writing style feels familiar, but its been years since I've even held those volumes.
Averoigne Legacy, based on the work of Clark Ashton Smith |
Anyway, that's it for now. I'll hopefully review these books properly once I've finished them. And also, I'll get to including some other books I have that I think are of interest. There are a few RPG books I'd like to review on here too, some of which I got from kickstarters.
But I think those are for another time.
Needless to say, I am still trucking on with getting stories sorted. I'm currently working on a story or two that were originally mean to be refresher stories and a break from a novella that I was writing. I needed a break from the novella because it was browing in size and getting out of hand, and now, the stories I'm doing to take a break are themselves getting out of hand. Who'd have thought that there'd have been so much backstabbing and treachery and war in Anglo-Saxon England hey? It puts Game of Thrones to shame.
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