A Book of Blades, Copyright 2022 by Rouges in the House
Podcast: 226 pages.
A Book of Blades is subtitled “A Sword & Sorcery
Anthology.” It contains 15 stories as well as a very brief introduction by
Matthew John, and an Artist’s Portfolio. This is one of the most entertaining
collections of S&S stories I’ve read in a long time. The quality is
consistently high in every instance and I definitely give it 5 stars. Below is
a listing of the stories with my brief comments about each.
“By the Sword,” by John C. Hocking: I only knew of Hocking
from his Conan pastiche, Conan and the Emerald Lotus, but I’ve never read it.
After reading this tale I’ll have to pick up more of Hocking’s work. A story
full of blood and thunder, and with a poignant ending that strongly engaged me.
“Ghost Song,” Chuck Clark: Turkael is a young hunter of his
tribe but it is he who must face a sorcerer shapeshifter. Something in this
tale reminded me of the character Imaro as created by the late Charles
Saunders, and that’s a fine compliment.
“Last of the Swamp Tribe,” by L.D. Whitney: There’s a bit of
“Beastmaster” in this. Man and wolf face their enemies together. Greywind is
the wolf and made an excellent character.
“Wanna Bet?,” by T.A. Markitan: A mage hires two warriors to
help him rob a ruin, but there’s a hidden agenda. And secrets within secrets.
The denouement turns on an interesting character reveal.
“The Serpent’s Heart,” by Howard Andrew Jones: A ship is
wrecked by a sea monster and its crew set adrift. They are rescued by another
ship, which is pursuing the monster. But of course there are secrets. The
scenes aboard the “rescuing” ship are beautifully rendered and very creepy.
Jones has recently had a couple of S&S books released and after this I’ll
certainly pick them up.
“How They Fall,” by Angeline B. Adams and Remco van Straten:
This is really a character study rather than a story, but it works because it’s
very well written and also quite short. It creates a melancholy mood that grows
stronger throughout.
“The Breath of Death,” by Jason M. Waltz: Starting this
story was a little jarring stylistically compared to the previous tales, and
that’s because it was written in present tense. Present tense can bring
immediacy to a story, and it does so here. It can also be risky at longer
lengths, but Waltz judged the length just right. I was engaged.
“Embracing Ember,” by S.E. Lindberg: Lindberg is an
excellent prose stylist, and maybe my favorite one working in the fantasy field
today. This is a story from his Dyscrasia universe, a fully realized but quite
bizarre world. The world building is incredible but Lindberg doesn’t stint on
character development either. Fully realized, but most unusual. Very much of a
treat.
“The Curse of Wine,” by J.M. Clarke: Kyembe wakes up from a
drunk to find that he’s been robbed. Bad idea. A short tale but very engaging.
“The Gift of Gallah,” by Matthew John: I enjoy tales of
aging warriors. When they’re well done. And this one is well done. Another
poignant ending.
“Crawl,” by Scott Oden: Oden is well known for the bloody
action of his stories, but in this one he stretches his wings a little more.
There is action, but the tale turns primarily on character and on historical
resonance. It’s a kind of retelling of European history against the backdrop of
Christianity’s spread. One really feels for the underdogs here.
“The Spine of Virens Imber,” by Nathaniel Webb: Shar the
Spearmen is an indomitable warrior, which is not unusual in sword and sorcery.
But the character is very well done and the writing strong. A fine piece.
“The City of the Screaming Pillars,” by Cora Buhlert: We
have an ensemble cast here, and they’re after treasure in an abandoned city of
the desert. A cursed city. Robert E. Howard strengthened his fantasy worlds by
bringing in horror elements, and Buhlert mines a similar ground here to very
good effect.
“Two Silvers for a Song of Blood,” by Jason Ray Carney:
Carney is a fellow academic and I’ve worked with him before on The Dark Man
Journal. That’s nonfiction and I haven’t previously read his fiction. Not all
academics can write blood and thunder but Carney masters it and gives his
“Barbarian-like” character some intriguing extra layers. Best title goes to
this one as well.
“The Blood of Old Shard,” by John R. Fultz: I’ll definitely
want to read more by Fultz. This was a great story to end the anthology on
because it’s certainly one of the strongest tales among a grouping of strong
pieces. Gnori is a great hero and, again, we have a most poignant ending that
left me wanting more. A good way to end a book.
So, to finish, I truly liked every story in this book, which
is not a common experience for me actually. Nothing weak here, and I recommend
them all. But, the three that hit me the hardest personally were the pieces by
Lindberg, Carney, and Fultz.