The DMRtian Chronicles, 8/22/2021
Short Sorcery: Clark Ashton Smith’s “The Seven Geases” (Goodman Games)
A Little Frazetta Conan History (Muddy Colors)
Elric of Melnibone (Elric #1) (1972) (The Ricochet Reviewer)
Pulp Fantasy Library: A Hero at the Gates (Grognardia)
Get ‘Em While You Can (Adventures Fantastic)
Deep in the Northern Thing: The Saga of the Volsungs, Translated by Jesse L. Byock (Black Gate)
How Frank Frazetta Won the Game of Thrones, Half a Century Ago (Village Voice)
The Big Idea: Matthew Hughes (Whatever)
Heavy Metal: The Movie (The PorPor Books Blog)
Scott Lynch provides update on his writing process (The Wertzone)
Science Fiction Adventures: April 1958 (Castalia House)
Arrakis Rippers: A Guide to “Dune”-Inspired Metal (Bandcamp)
Tanith Lee: "Il Bacio (Il Chiave)," "The Beautiful Biting Machine" and "The Isle is Full of Noises" (MPorcius Fiction Log)
What Would Conan Drink? (Ken Lizzi)
The Fort by Adrian Goldsworthy – REVIEW (David’s Book Blurg)
Sir Walter Scott – born 250 years ago (The Edinburgh Reporter)
Film Review: Spartacus (1960) (Talking Pulp)
When The Goddess Wakes – Stop Sleeping On This Series (The Quill to Live)
Robert E. Howard: "Old Garfield's Heart," "Dig Me No Grave," and "The Dwellers Under the Tombs" (MPorcius Fiction Log)
Gordon Linzner’s Saga of Horan (Dark Worlds)
Ellsworth’s Cinema of Swords: Lone Wolf and Cub, Part 1 (Black Gate)
Preorder Now—John Carter of Mars®: Gods of the Forgotten by Geary Gravel (Edgar Rice Burroughs)
Technology Meets Magic in Adrian Cole's Dream Lords: Rebellion (Spiral Tower Press)
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.