Independent Author Spotlight: D.H. Dunn
The next independent author in our spotlight series is D.H. Dunn, who’s released three books in his fantastic adventure series Fractured Everest.
Read MoreThe next independent author in our spotlight series is D.H. Dunn, who’s released three books in his fantastic adventure series Fractured Everest.
Read MoreIn the third installment in the serialized version of Tros of Samothrace, Tros has rescued his father from Roman captivity only to see the old man breathe his last after bequeathing his son a deathbed prophecy.
Read MoreThis week: Robert E. Howard, Jeff Jones, Edmond Hamilton, Lovecraft, Gene Wolfe, and more.
Read MoreThere are few writers who have the distinction of creating a new genre of fiction, still fewer whose influence is felt generations later. H. Rider Haggard is one such writer.
Read MoreArtist Jim Fitzpatrick created a logo for an Irish filmmaker. Now, the Red Bull corporation is trying to sue over infringement.
Read MoreThe latest release from DMR Books is The Road to Infinity, a picaresque fantasy novel in the style of Jack Vance. I thought the public would want to know more about the man who wrote it, so here’s my Q&A session with Gael DeRoane.
Read MoreWhat is it about Edgar Allan Poe? A writer of morbid poems and tales of terror who died 170 years ago, Poe stands today virtually without equal in the canon of American literature. Only Mark Twain and perhaps Ernest Hemingway can lay claim to anything like a similar stature in both critical opinion and popularity. Why should he be so central to our imagination now, in the 21st century?
Read MoreThis week: Howard Days, Fritz Leiber, Henry Kuttner, C.L. Moore, Weird Tales, Galad Elflandsson, Lin Carter, and more.
Read MoreWe have a new feature here on the DMR Blog to give some exposure to independent fantasy authors. Kicking things off is Jason J. Nugent, whose first book in the Curse of the Drakku series comes out today. Read the interview, then go check it out!
Read More“I have followed Caesar’s Commentaries as closely as possible in writing this story, but as Caesar, by his own showing, was a liar, a brute, a treacherous humbug and conceited ass, I have not been to much trouble to make him out a hero.”
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