The DMRtian Chronicles, 7/11/2021
Planetary Adventures (Castalia House)
The Swords of Heaven, the Flowers of Hell (1979) (Terhali’s Particular Satisfaction)
Review of “The Fantasies of Clark Ashton Smith Vol. I: The End of the Story” (J.W. Wright)
The Mythic and the Barbaric in Schuyler Hernstrom's Thune's Vision (Spiral Tower Press)
The Eye of Sounnu and the North Star of Neo-Pulp (Spiral Tower Press)
Robert E. Howard wrote more than fantasy and more than Conan (Rogue Blades)
What sword-and-sorcery needs (The Silver Key)
Rediscovered: 50th Anniversaries (Up and Down these Mean Streets)
Howard and James’ Ten Vance Favorites (Goodman Games)
Caveman Hero Comics (Dark Worlds)
Stories by H P Lovecraft, C A Smith and E Hamilton in the October 1931 issue of Weird Tales (MPorcius Fiction Log)
The Further Adventures of Professor Challenger by Arthur Conan Doyle (Tor)
Virgil Finlay: Master of Dark Fantasy Illustration (These Fantastic Worlds)
Book Review: Lords of Dyscrasia by S.E. Lindberg (Aeon of Chaos)
Ellsworth’s Cinema of Swords: The Fall of the Hollywood Epic (Black Gate)
"Sticks" by Karl Edward Wagner (Cthulery)
Weird #27: “Smoke Ghost” by Fritz Leiber (1941) (Archaeologies of the Weird)
John the Balladeer: The Hanging Stones (Schlock Value)
Book Review: ‘The Witcher: Sword of Destiny’ by Andrzej Sapkowski (Talking Pulp)
‘SF IMPULSE' Magazine: An Impulse to Strange (Eight Miles Higher)
The Original Thongor Stories (Dark Worlds)
Review of “Merlin’s Godson” by H. Warner Munn (J.W. Wright)
Pulp Fantasy Library: Fane of the Black Pharaoh (Grognardia)
D.M. Ritzlin founded DMR Books in 2015 with the aim of revitalizing sword-and-sorcery literature. DMR’s publications include reprints of classic material by authors such as Robert E. Howard and Clark Ashton Smith, as well as brand-new collections and anthologies by some of the finest fantasy writers active today. A collection of his own stories, Necromancy in Nilztiria, was released in October 2020. Nilztiria is a world of adventure and strangeness, peopled by lusty heroes and callous villains. The thirteen sword-and-sorcery stories presented in Necromancy in Nilztiria place the emphasis on sorcery and mix in a touch of gallows humor. Click the cover for more information.