This focuses on Beauty in Weird Fiction, with interviews. S E Lindberg is the creator of Dyscrasia Fiction, a Managing Editor at Black Gate, once an intern for Tales from the Mag.’s Skull & moderator of the Goodreads Sword and Sorcery Group
Saturday, July 27, 2024
Samuel Dillon - Original Orphan Maker Art
Tuesday, July 16, 2024
To Walk on Worlds - review of Matthew John's S&S Collection
Black Gate highlighted Rogues in the House (RitH) podcast in 2022, and in a few years, that crew rapidly expanded with Sword & Sorcery publications that include: A Book of Blades (2022) and A Book of Blades Vol. II (2023), and a collection of John R. Fultz's stories in The Revelations of Zang (2024) This post reviews the newest collection of stories from RitH's own Matthew John released this June: To Walk on Worlds is available now in eBook and paperback. Matthew John is fascinated with adventure fiction and moonlights as a writer and game designer for Monolith in addition to his podcast responsibilities. This post reviews To Walk on Worlds with excerpts.
If Gandalf was an a**hole, then we'd call him a "Meddler" instead of an "Istar"
The back cover indicates Lachmannon may be the protagonist of focus, and this Northman of Kaelta displays clear, Conan-like vibes while featuring in many of the stories as the key barbarian. He rocks, but the everpresent, and more unique character (anti-hero?) across the book is Maxus the Meddler. A "meddler" is a sorcerer, and Maxus gains the god-like power to move (and exploit and dominate) multiple realms; the titular phrase 'To Talk on Worlds' emphasizes that readers will experience Maxus's exploration and machinations. Interior illustrations by Sandy Carruthers feature Maxus most, and he appears physically like Gandalf. So Maxus is phenotypically a wizard, but he is otherwise a bonafide a** hole. In the rare instances Maxus requires assistance from other beings, he does not form a fellowship. He may lure in rogue champions, like Lachmannon, to aid him but he would never consider them a partner. Maxus the Meddler is a splendid character, and it is super fun to witness him gain power and exploit other characters.
The table of contents (below) reveals eleven stories, seven of which were published in popular S&S venues. They read even better together, with four additional stories helping flesh out the land containing the capital city of Pathra, Keal, Vescivius, Spatha, and the Burning Isle. Oddly, perhaps on purpose, every story has an abundance of grinning characters. Matthew Johns's writing style is very accessible, moving at the fast pace one would expect from pulpy fiction.