The DMRtian Chronicles, 3/31/2019
This week: Edgar Rice Burroughs, Clark Ashton Smith, Windy City Pulp & Paper Convention, and more.
Read MoreThis week: Edgar Rice Burroughs, Clark Ashton Smith, Windy City Pulp & Paper Convention, and more.
Read MoreIt would look as if Steve Tompkins is still well-remembered by many bloggers out there in the aether. Commemorations of his untimely death ten years ago were many and far-flung.
Read MoreThis week: Frazetta, Conan, Merritt, turbonerds, galleries of pulp cover art, and more.
Read MoreWhat really was Steve’s life’s work? He was one of the few men in his era raising the lantern to shine a light upon the past to help us better understand the present.
Read MoreIf you’re a fan of the type of content featured here on DMR Blog--whether or not you’ve ever heard of his name prior—today you should pour a libation for Steve, and honor a man whose passion for fantasy fiction in general and sword-and-sorcery literature in particular was second to none.
Read MoreJohn C. Hocking, author of Conan and the Emerald Lotus, remembers Steve Tompkins.
Read MoreSteve Tompkins died ten years ago today. I and a few other bloggers will be posting blog entries in tribute to Steve, whom I consider the best “genre” blogger of the first decade in this twenty-first century. This post is intended to function as a one-stop guide to Steve's online legacy.
Read MoreHira Singh was Talbot Mundy’s fourth novel. It received mostly positive reviews but many critics were expecting something else, a novel more like his first three books. Hira Singh is first and foremost a tribute to the Indian soldiers who died fighting in Europe during World War I.
Read MoreThis week: Howard Andrew Jones’ new novel, Conan, Jirel, and a T-rex getting blasted by a tank.
Read MoreThe subject matter of heavy metal lyrics often mirrors that of sword and sorcery fiction. Sometimes the mirror is more than metaphorical, when bands show their dedication to their fantasy concepts by using album artwork identical to images that have appeared on the covers of novels and anthologies.
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