DMR Books

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The DMRtian Chronicles, 7/18/2021

Review of “Sword Woman and Other Historical Adventures” by Robert E. Howard (J.W. Wright)

Science Fiction Adventures: September 1957 (Castalia House)

Coming Soon to PulpFest — ERBFest 2021 (PulpFest)

“Primeval” by Charles W. Diffin (Dark Worlds)

Early Kuttner: Pulp Fantasy Library: Hydra (Grognardia)

Swords and Swords-and-Sorcery (Ken Lizzi)

Review of “Flame and Crimson: A History of Sword-and-Sorcery” by Brian Murphy (J.W. Wright)

Review of “The Collected Fantasies of Clark Ashton Smith Vol. II: The Door to Saturn” (J.W. Wright)

Lin Carter’s Imaginary Worlds #3: Tricks of the Trade and Reflections (Black Gate)

"The Dunwich Horror" (Cthulery)

More HPL: Notes on Letters to Family, Vol. II – part one (Tentaclii)

Ambrose Bierce's The Damned Thing: A Two-Minute Summary and Analysis (The Classic Horror Blog)

Weird #29: “Mimic” by Donald A. Wollheim (1942) (Archaeologies of the Weird)

‘Startling Stories’, illustrating ‘Strangers on the Heights’ by Manly Wade Wellman (The Skeptic)

The 2021 Munsey Award Nominees (PulpFest)

Edmond Hamilton: "The Earth-Owners," "Creatures of the Comet" & "The Sargasso of Space" (MPorcius Fiction Log)

Edinburgh gallery launches ‘virtual experience’ devoted to Hollywood special effects legend Ray Harryhausen (The Scotsman)

Book Review: 'Sword of the Nurlingas' by Gerald Earl Bailey (The PorPor Books Blog)

Book Review: ‘The Witcher: Blood of Elves’ by Andrzej Sapkowski (Talking Pulp)

Ellsworth’s Cinema of Swords: En Garde, Old Boy (Black Gate)

Science Fiction Adventures: August 1957 (Castalia House)

“Folk who turn their backs on trouble only get their arses kicked.” Vancian Quotations (Goodman Games)

A Sorcerer of Atlantis, with A Prince in the Kingdom of Ghosts (Publishers Weekly)

Review: Tales of the Mongoose and Meerkat By Jim Breyfogle (Upstream Reviews)


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.