Sword & Sorcery Recommendations

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  • čas přidán 1. 08. 2024
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Komentáře • 152

  • @tonygriego6382
    @tonygriego6382 Před rokem +27

    I love Fafhrd and the Grey Mouser. You're right, Fritz Lieber is sadly underrated. Fun fact: he coined the term Sword and Sorcery.

    • @michaelk.vaughan8617
      @michaelk.vaughan8617  Před rokem +6

      Yes, and I meant to talk about that in the video! Oh well, at least you remembered for me! Thanks!

  • @duanespurlock5879
    @duanespurlock5879 Před rokem +3

    "I'm just here to bring you culture." Thank you!
    Leiber: I think you're right about his S&S tales being not read so much today as they should be.
    Glad you mentioned Imaro. These are really excellent.
    I haven't read anything by David Gemmel, but I keep hearing that he's very good and respected.

  • @colonelweird
    @colonelweird Před rokem +15

    When I was a kid DAW published a great anthology called Amazons, edited by Jessica Amanda Salmonson, which focuses on women in S&S. It includes a story by Saunders, as well as other great stories by writers who should not be forgotten, including a very early work by the author who later became much more famous as Robin Hobb. The book includes a bibliography of works which are still worth reading for fans of the genre, including Joanna Russ, Elizabeth A. Lynn, C.J. Cherryh, and Tanith Lee. Salmonson herself wrote a series about an Asian-inspired fantasy setting. I recommend the book - the stories are great, and it shows how influential S&S has been in the whole fantasy scene.

  • @Papyrian
    @Papyrian Před rokem +26

    Lin Carter's stories are very derivative even within this genre where the books and stories tend to be pretty similar to each other, but you read Lin Carter because he loved this stuff so devotedly, perhaps he loved it more than anybody else ever did. He's the guy who went around telling everybody how great these stories are and for his efforts and enthusiasm alone he deserves to be there among the giants, pastiche, controversies and all.

    • @michaelk.vaughan8617
      @michaelk.vaughan8617  Před rokem +1

      You make a good point.

    • @starstriker1881
      @starstriker1881 Před 3 měsíci +1

      I was surprised to hear of the controversy about him. His Thongor series introduced me to sword and sorcery for the first time. So i thought he was a great s&s writer in all.

  • @richardbrown8966
    @richardbrown8966 Před rokem +13

    One writer I think should be on your list is TANITH LEE. She wrote some great sword and sorcery, horror and science fiction disguised as sword and sorcery.

  • @31LaschG
    @31LaschG Před rokem +5

    When it comes to Fafhrd and the Grey Mouser. Howard Chaykin and Mike Mignola’s comic book adaption. When it comes to Elric check out Titan books The Michael Moorcock library and the four Blondel comic book adaptions. Lastly the Dark Horse collection of DC’s collection of the early seventies adaptions.

  • @bookssongsandothermagic
    @bookssongsandothermagic Před rokem +8

    Genuinely grinned from ear to ear when your thumbnail appeared. Always like my day to include a new MKV video and this is an awesome idea for one.

  • @TheSamuraiGoomba
    @TheSamuraiGoomba Před rokem +3

    That cover with Imaro riding the rhino is one of the best fantasy paperback covers I've ever seen.

  • @bookfantastic
    @bookfantastic Před rokem +5

    Moorcock also wrote his own Mars series , very similar to Burroughs but not a ripoff, under the pseudonym Edward P. Bradbury (around 1966): Warriors of Mars, Blades of Mars, and Barbarians of Mars. I have only read the first one and I really enjoyed it. As soon as I find the second (I have the third), I will finish the series. Recommended.

  • @MceDMD
    @MceDMD Před rokem +3

    Thank you for mentioning Charles Saunders now considered the Father of Sword and Soul . A fan actually tracked him down in Canada to get him to reprint the Imaro series . Please keep in mind the DAW paperback book one of Imaro has an entire large section expunged in later reprints at the request of Mr Saunders . My understanding is that he felt the expunged section was too close to the actual Rwanda genocide .

    • @Roondawg_Valhalla
      @Roondawg_Valhalla Před 7 měsíci

      Hi do u own any of these reprinted books? I’m missing the naama war and the dossouye books. Willing to pay a great amount.

  • @paulmonahawk4921
    @paulmonahawk4921 Před rokem +1

    Fascinating! 👍 video Mike. I have a few of those on my TBR shelf..!

  • @matthewsuchomski2593
    @matthewsuchomski2593 Před rokem +1

    Thank you for this video. Even though I’ve heard of (though not necessarily read) everyone except the last three, it’s nice to see a good rundown of the must-read authors of my favorite genre.

  • @OrangeLibrary
    @OrangeLibrary Před rokem +5

    Despite some flaws, I am enjoying the 'Sunset Warrior' series by Eric Van Lustbader. Lustbader is known for his contemporary thrillers and his 'Ninja' series, but this series were his first books and his dip into sword and sorcery.

    • @michaelk.vaughan8617
      @michaelk.vaughan8617  Před rokem +1

      Thanks for the recommendation!

    • @allopez8563
      @allopez8563 Před 22 dny

      Man I remmember the Ninja novels my dad had in his book shelf I read them when I was around 13 to 14 yo and its erotisim shocked me. I certainly squeezed and yanked the goose a lot reading about Nicholas Linnear antics in the bedroom.

  • @wadejohnston4305
    @wadejohnston4305 Před rokem +1

    Love your channel and you and of course your STATELY MANOR. Also its awesome you shoute out Liam! Him and his channel are doing the lord of wars work!

  • @nickster_xd8937
    @nickster_xd8937 Před rokem +8

    Coincidentally, I was looking for more s&s books since I had a good haul at a bookstore I visited the other day. Thankfully, I have a wise book reviewer to show me the good stuff!
    Also, in case you’re curious, I found books 1-5 of Thongor (just in time for this video!), the Leigh Brackett’s Eric John Stark trilogy, Time Slave and Gor books 1-3 and 5 by John Norman, Ancient My Enemy by Gordon R. Dickson, and Tarzan books 7, 10, and 12
    This month is really great for my paperback collection!

  • @fredflintstone1485
    @fredflintstone1485 Před 6 měsíci +2

    New fan of yours Michael. Got new authors to explore from this. I've read all of Gemmell and was an incredible and entertaining author. My favorite character was Waylander from Gemmell but there was something for everyone there that likes Sword and or Sorcery.
    Huge fan of Kane Series and who hasn't read R E Howard. Conan was great as was most of his stuff but I was pleasantly surprised by his cowboy novels that were downright funny !

  • @jamesabbiati5775
    @jamesabbiati5775 Před rokem +1

    Love this genre, Mike. Will definitely get to some of the stuff I haven't read, after I finish getting to the other stuff I havent read from your other vids! Just started MR James. My edition started with Lovecraft's famous essay on weird fiction ... which was looooooong, but informative. Keep 'em comin!

  • @jeremyfee
    @jeremyfee Před rokem +1

    For a long time I've greatly appreciated Liam, you, and David Wiley as people I could discuss Appendix N writers and characters with in the video comments, etc. Great book recommendations, as always. I'm intrigued you didn't call it a "starter kit" like some of your other recent videos. Peace.

  • @MceDMD
    @MceDMD Před rokem +2

    Interesting you bring up Leiber after mentioning “Kull “ . Apparently back in the 60’s Leiber was approached to continue the Kull series . He turned it down to focus on gathering up and publishing the Nehwon series . Concerning Wagner and Kane …. Well hopefully good news .. it seems that Baen books might be re-reprinting the Kane series , so keep your fingers and toes crossed.

  • @theramblingreviewer5150
    @theramblingreviewer5150 Před rokem +3

    Excellent video. I read a little bit of sword and sorcery last you for FFS and I enjoyed the Howard and Lieber stories I read. I need to read more of them, as well as Michael Moorcock. Also, the Kane series sounds absolutely incredible.

  • @BookishChas
    @BookishChas Před rokem +2

    Some great recommendations, and some I’ve never heard of. I’ve been on the fence about Fritz Leiber. I have the first two Elric collections, and I’m going to start them next year.

  • @davebrzeski
    @davebrzeski Před rokem +6

    The most egregious omission must be Henry Kuttner's Elak of Atlantis; a series ably continued in recent years by Adrian Cole, who also gave us his excellent Voidal trilogy of books.

  • @creweluc4732
    @creweluc4732 Před měsícem

    Thanks, Mike. Nice detailed video.

  • @midnightgreen8319
    @midnightgreen8319 Před rokem +5

    Charles Saunders is criminally underead. Imaro is absolutely brilliant Sword and Sorcery.

  • @pamelatarajcak5634
    @pamelatarajcak5634 Před rokem +2

    I was genuinely afraid you were going to try and hold the candle for the entire video! 😂

  • @nightmarishcompositions4536

    I’ve read just about everything Robert E. Howard and Michael Moorcock have written. These guys are metal as hell.
    Some other sword and sorcery series I’ve enjoyed are…
    Fafhrd and the Gray Mouser
    Gotrek and Felix
    Tiger and Del
    Kane
    Legend of Drizzt
    Drenai Saga
    Vampire Hunter D
    Warrior Witch of Hel
    Jirel of Joiry
    Claymore and Berserk manga also scratch the same itch for me.

  • @roycedeviscarra9166
    @roycedeviscarra9166 Před rokem +1

    Cool. Jumped into Conan after viewing a few of your Robert E. Howard videos. Having a good time so far and it's been fun tracking the lancer books down(wanted to try Conan stories chronologically). Been eyeing some of the other authors on this list particularly Karl Edward Wagner but being relatively new to fantasy I figured it best to start with Howard. Great video!

  • @trunkshatake7407
    @trunkshatake7407 Před 6 měsíci

    If I somehow ever become famous or influential I’m gonna mention your channel in every interview and make sure you have millions of subscribers . I watch quite a few book tubers , but you are hands down the best sir . I raise my chalice of mead and battle axes to you and tip my horned helmet .

  • @briteskin
    @briteskin Před rokem

    I don't know how long I been watching book tubers but I rarely try the many recommendations because of the thick book and multi-volume that people devour today when it comes to sword and sorcery stuff.
    I am realizing watching this that pretty much graphic novels and horror are what I have picked up based on recommendations which was one of the things I turned to book tube to stop doing. Between this and the last sci-fi vid I am seeing lots of interesting stuff that can hopefully fit in once I finish the things on my current tbr along with Edge. Thanks Michael!

  • @disshelvedwithadamwhite8731

    An outstanding list of authors. I had never heard of Imaro though. So of course I had to immediately order it. Thanks a lot.

  • @charlesstanford1310
    @charlesstanford1310 Před rokem

    Thanks for this. I've been meaning to read more S&S for years. I read some of the Elric books a while ago, and I love listening to the album _The Armor of Ire_ by the band Eternal Champion.

  • @garylovisi357
    @garylovisi357 Před rokem +1

    Thongor was fun, Carter said it was his combination of John Carter of Mars and Conan, and it does capture those books. Great video, Michael, i would also add Elak of Atlantis, the first book i published under my Gryphon Books imprint way back in 1985. I have read all the books you mentioned, except the Leibers, don’t know why, and the Gemell , Legend, which i am looking forward to reading soon. Thanks for the fun video, was like a walk down s&s memory lane.

  • @bizarrebraincomics7819
    @bizarrebraincomics7819 Před rokem +1

    Great one. Big S&S fan. Love Howard and the others. Never read David Gemel.

  • @LiamsLyceum
    @LiamsLyceum Před rokem +2

    1:32 this made me laugh out loud 😂

  • @bobbehers1625
    @bobbehers1625 Před rokem +1

    Thanks Mike! I needed some culture!

  • @MagusMarquillin
    @MagusMarquillin Před rokem +3

    Hopefully Wiskey will suffice - I'll put it in a horn though. :D
    Found a complete Jirel of Joiry the other day, so I'm excited to give fem-forties-fantasy-pulp a try - it's only 5 shorts, so it'll be quite manageable.
    I never heard of Imaro or Charles Saunders - here I was thinking Rage of Dragons and Black Leopard, Red Wolf was something new, but I guess it's just their rapid success that's new. Seems Saunders was able to finish a 30 years later cliffhanger with a book 4 in 2009, and some Imaro short stories shortly before his death, so hopefully people are noticing him.

  • @sgriffin9960
    @sgriffin9960 Před rokem +4

    Geez, don’t scare me like that! Happy to see you again. - This batch of books are really great recommendations! We need the Eternal Champion to reappear on Earth! I’ve added Imaro to my TBR.

    • @michaelk.vaughan8617
      @michaelk.vaughan8617  Před rokem +1

      Sorry. I had to take my old dog, Pumpsie, to the emergency vet clinic early this morning and was there for hours. Turns out she has vestibular syndrome and is very dizzy.

    • @sgriffin9960
      @sgriffin9960 Před rokem +1

      @@michaelk.vaughan8617 Oh no! That can be very scary if you haven’t had a dog who’s been through it before! Sending hugs for Pumpsie! 🤗 Hope she feels better soon.

    • @anotherbibliophilereads
      @anotherbibliophilereads Před rokem

      I read almost all The Eternal Champion novel in high school. I wished I hadn’t unhauled them.

    • @tonygriego6382
      @tonygriego6382 Před rokem +2

      @@michaelk.vaughan8617 Best wishes for your dog.

  • @Seeker_33
    @Seeker_33 Před rokem +1

    Excellent recommendations! Very interested in Wagner’s Kane but it’s difficult to find physical copies of those books 😢

  • @bambiterranova5837
    @bambiterranova5837 Před 25 dny

    Should've brought up my man Nifft the Lean!! 💅

  • @kylestephens4133
    @kylestephens4133 Před 7 měsíci

    Brian Lumley's Tarra H'Rossak series is one of the best S&S series I have ever read. I should also recommend The Tritonian Ring by de Camp--it is hilarious and filled with adventure and intrigue. I would also be remiss if I didn't toss in Kuttner's Elak of Atlantis series--humurous and plenty of daring-do (the great Adrian Cole has written a follow-up series which I am getting ready to read about Elak as King!)

  • @jonmcmillan8570
    @jonmcmillan8570 Před rokem +1

    I gave this vid a thumbs up when he said he’s thinking of starting drinking

  • @bellane4478
    @bellane4478 Před rokem

    in Brazil we also have great stories of sword and sorcery the ones I remember are, the black dog of clonthaf, the swordsman of coal and Brakan. I hope all these stories and many more are published around the world.

  • @psychosis8429
    @psychosis8429 Před 2 měsíci

    I've never heard of sword and sorcery before but these books seem pretty cool. I might check some of these out as swordfighting is something I find really cool and enjoy.

  • @Stavekoff
    @Stavekoff Před 7 měsíci

    thanks for the recs!

  • @davidaldinger3666
    @davidaldinger3666 Před 7 měsíci

    John Norman’s Gor series. They were of questionable literary quality, but he managed to write a LOT of books in the series. I only mention them because they were one of the first fantasy series I ever read.

  • @kimesch9698
    @kimesch9698 Před rokem

    I’m thinking of starting drinking, too.😆😆😆😉

  • @johnmoller9738
    @johnmoller9738 Před rokem +2

    I’d recommend both Michael Shea’s Nifft the Lean Trilogy and Jack Vance’s Dying Earth series, specifically the Cugel the Clever books.

    • @michaelk.vaughan8617
      @michaelk.vaughan8617  Před rokem

      Thanks for the recommendation!

    • @Dacre1000
      @Dacre1000 Před rokem

      I would say that Vance was more a general fantasy writer than one in the specific sword and sorcery subgenre, but I guess the border between those two are sometimes blurry. I wouldn't have called Elric sword and sorcery either, truth to be told. They seem to me quite the traditional fantasy. Dying earth tough, and yeah, specifically the two Cugel books, are a must.

  • @immortallegacy100
    @immortallegacy100 Před rokem +2

    I think sword & sorcery in general is pretty hit or miss, and I tend to attribute that to short stories sometimes being difficult to immerse yourself in. By the time you get accustomed to the characters and setting, the story is already over. That's been my recurring issue anyway, but I still love Conan, and Solomon Kane has inspired my own stories (I'm a writer btw). I know "The Witcher" is a ripoff of Elric of Melnibone, but I did enjoy the short story collection "The Last Wish", mainly because it was Gerald thrown into European fairy tales, and that was fun. Some of the old D&D novels are pretty underrated in my opinion, with "Azure Bonds" and "Elfshadow" both being pretty good. Older D&D kinda walks the line between high fantasy and sword & sorcery since the inspiration was much more the latter but became the former overtime. Great video as always. This channel has pretty much been my gateway to a lot of classic pulp.

    • @lbpews9919
      @lbpews9919 Před rokem

      I completely disagree that the Witcher series is a ripoff of Elric, though I will completely concede that the author took clear inspiration from Moorcock's work (despite denying it). When it comes to Elric and Geralt, aside from some very surface level details such as Geralt clearly being visually lifted from Elric (though the similarities only go so far as having white hair and using swords), the two characters are nothing alike in any way whatsoever in regards to their appearance, personality, and character. I would say the only egregious copies from Moorcock are Geralt sometimes being referred to as the White Wolf, which is just a nickname he gets because he belongs to the Wolf School of Witchers and his hair is white from mutations he received as a child in training, and the Conjunction of Spheres, which in the Witcher novels is event only mentioned a handful of times and is just window dressing, so it's easy to give it a pass. The two works as a whole are so demonstrably different from each other that it's hard to even compare the two apart from the very surface level details that are easily picked apart when the text is actually read - Elric is an epic, high fantasy, sword and sorcery saga while the Witcher is a very grounded, realistic and character driven story (where Geralt isn't even the "main character").
      I didn't mean to suddenly jump in out of nowhere and write a thesis defending the books, but it does irk me when people make that claim when just reading the books disproves it entirely (unless one goes in with a bias to try and prove it's a ripoff, which at that point any detail will appear to be plagiarism). If you enjoyed The Last Wish then give Sword of Destiny a read. It's the second short story collection that starts off with fun romps through eastern European fairy tales and ends with some real exploration of the characters in the world, and leads into the novels (which are a bit more dry at the start, but still a solid read, albeit not very sword and sorcery and more just straight pulp - Baptism of Fire and Season of Storms are just fun shenanigans). As much as I do enjoy the Witcher books I would not compare them to Elric, which isn't to say the Witcher is poorly written. The Elric Saga is a masterclass of sword and sorcery and Moorcock's writing is pure elegance that should be experienced by any who enjoy fantasy, and very few works can compare to it.
      I don't whether people would consider them sword and sorcery, but the original Dragonlance Trilogy of D&D books is a fun romp, though I feel that's mostly because it just feels like you're reading a group's D&D campaign. I highly recommend them to anyone that just wants fun, light reading with a fantasy flair

    • @linuslauterbach2975
      @linuslauterbach2975 Před 2 měsíci

      @@lbpews9919couldn‘t agree more with what you said about Elric vs The Witcher. While the inspiration Elric had on Geralt is clear with certain details, the works as a whole are simply too different to call it a knock-off. Sucks though that Sapkowski seems to get defensive on this topic.

  • @CriminOllyBlog
    @CriminOllyBlog Před rokem +1

    Great video! Assume you’re doing a separate one on John Norman?
    Looks like the Saunders books aren’t available on kindle over here which sucks. I read a story of his in an anthology recently and really liked it.

    • @michaelk.vaughan8617
      @michaelk.vaughan8617  Před rokem

      That does suck about Saunders. His books are tough to get otherwise. And of course you are the John Norman expert!

  • @petefeigal8118
    @petefeigal8118 Před rokem

    Michael, with your help I found the book, "Cross Country," by Herbert Kastle, thanks.

  • @johnc7389
    @johnc7389 Před 6 měsíci

    I'm making a list of fiction to get through, and I've added several of these to the list now.
    I wanted to mention The Night Lands, by Hodgson. I don't know if it strictly qualifies as S&S, but if Carpenter can make the list, why not. I've not yet red The Night Land myself, but the novelty of something that bizarre/sci-fi being written in 1912 is sufficient enough to fascinate me.

  • @adriensbookchannel3475
    @adriensbookchannel3475 Před rokem +1

    Great stuff. I recently finished Legend and was thinking throughout the video that it definitely needed a shoutout ;) Can you believe I haven't read a single Conan novel? I think I was scarred by the Arnold movie. I may have to remedy this.

  • @SaraHeumphreus-jj6zy
    @SaraHeumphreus-jj6zy Před rokem

    The Kane stories are OOP last time I saw. If you find one grab it.

  • @mizukarate
    @mizukarate Před rokem +1

    Had a Beer today 🍺🍻🍺🍻🍺.....my spirit knew.

  • @bookfantastic
    @bookfantastic Před 11 měsíci

    I've never read either but characters Jongor by Robert Moore Williams and Kyrik by Gardner F. Fox come to mind. I think I have some of these volumes but I have other S & S queued up to read first.
    Thanks for the review.

  • @srpyle
    @srpyle Před rokem

    Walter Dean Meyers Legend of Tarik. Excellent YA sword & sorcery.

  • @Mark-jp9dz
    @Mark-jp9dz Před rokem

    Surprised that Eddings does not feature for either his Belgarion series, or the Sir Sparhawk series.

  • @gojirajenkins8528
    @gojirajenkins8528 Před 6 měsíci

    I like this video

  • @AnneEWilliamson
    @AnneEWilliamson Před rokem

    Drinking mead is always a good idea, lol. But these are great recommendations!

    • @michaelk.vaughan8617
      @michaelk.vaughan8617  Před rokem +1

      I wouldn’t even know where to get mead.

    • @AnneEWilliamson
      @AnneEWilliamson Před rokem

      @@michaelk.vaughan8617 Renaissance Festival is usually where I get it. Though most alcohol stores have some, I think.

  • @JonathanRossignol
    @JonathanRossignol Před rokem

    Rock on! 🤘

  • @deathdealer9054
    @deathdealer9054 Před rokem +1

    Make video about elric or other michael moorcock stuff pleaseee

  • @jamesholder13
    @jamesholder13 Před rokem

    Awesome!

  • @user-cs9is7mh7q
    @user-cs9is7mh7q Před 4 měsíci

    Glen Cook, Black Company series (first 3 books)

  • @Toracube
    @Toracube Před 11 měsíci

    Interestingly the book trader I go to says Micheal moorcock lived upstairs at his old house..and he’d hear him typing away on his type writer…. I’m currently reading leibers swords and devilry.

  • @danynumero6
    @danynumero6 Před 5 měsíci

    So far I think this is my favorite video of yours, Michael! Sword and sorcery is also my favorite genre and it’s just awesome to see someone give it the acknowledgment it deserves when there are so many who do not. Just curious, but do you by chance listen to any heavy metal at all? I ask because so much of the music is based on sword and sorcery.

    • @michaelk.vaughan8617
      @michaelk.vaughan8617  Před 5 měsíci

      I have listened to my share of Iron Maiden.

    • @danynumero6
      @danynumero6 Před 5 měsíci

      @@michaelk.vaughan8617 That’s awesome! Love to hear it! Give Manowar a listen sometime. It’s pure Conan-metal.

  • @waltera13
    @waltera13 Před rokem

    Nice Moorcock mention.

  • @allopez8563
    @allopez8563 Před 22 dny

    Nift the Lean!!

  • @KelsaRavenlock
    @KelsaRavenlock Před rokem

    Careful what you say about Fritz's work the snow women may be listening.

  • @musicalneptunian
    @musicalneptunian Před rokem

    If you start drinking don't forget Roger. He has been of such great service to the Von Manor. It would be very ungentlemanly for Roger to miss out.

  • @KelsaRavenlock
    @KelsaRavenlock Před rokem

    C S Friedman's cold fire trilogy might be good for a sword and sorcery fan.
    It is set in a world that could be Altair from Forbidden Planet but 20 generations later and instead of a machine that makes psychic energy solid it is various forms of energy fields produced by the planet.
    In order to survive on a planet where random thoughts shape reality the society has regressed back to a medieval model controlled by a central church.
    The church members are as devote as any but the reason for the church rather than religion is instead to create a universally accepted narrative so as to set the nature of reality on the planet.
    Due to thought affecting reality in this world machines and mechanical devices are all but non existant as thinking something might fail is enough to make it fail.
    One of the interesting things is also the fact the main hostile alien species in the series did not exist as intelligent beings before the humans arrived and in fact the planet had no sentient life at all.
    It was the humans fear of hostile intelligent life that warped the animals into what was feared by the colonists.
    They even have a church leader who was changed by a demon and bound to it even though the idea of the demon was invented by that church leader while making the religion.
    There is a good deal of sorcery in the series as well in the form of individuals harnessing this power for their own ends.
    You follow a brother Paul type monk in the series the standard good guy outsider on the hero's journey but instead of the hero and their companions fighting the big bad dark lord at the end the dark lord is his traveling companion and one of the protagonists of the story.

  • @seandarbe2521
    @seandarbe2521 Před rokem

    If you like sword and sorcery with a bit of witty humor Robert Asprin, Glen Cook, Lawrence Watt-evans, Glen Cook, and the late L. sprague De camp.

  • @ChristopherEvenstar
    @ChristopherEvenstar Před rokem +2

    I was hoping you would mention Fritz Leiber! I love those stories so much. A more modern author is Joe Abercrombie. _The Blade Itself_ feels spawned, wholly formed, from Sword and Sorcery.

  • @brettrobson5739
    @brettrobson5739 Před rokem

    Not familiar with Saunders. Gunna check him out RIGHT NOW!

  • @JP-1990
    @JP-1990 Před rokem +2

    I'm sorry, but i can't see the name "Brak" and not think of the Space Ghost character.

  • @slothflyer
    @slothflyer Před rokem +1

    Well done! Huzzah!

    • @slothflyer
      @slothflyer Před rokem

      I wish you'd have mentioned Make Wade Wellman's Hok and Kardios

    • @michaelk.vaughan8617
      @michaelk.vaughan8617  Před rokem

      I should have.

    • @slothflyer
      @slothflyer Před rokem

      It's no big deal. I'm just a big Wellman buff. Keep up the good work!

  • @freelivefree7221
    @freelivefree7221 Před rokem

    Great list.
    I"d recommend all these authors but I also think they are wildly uneven in quality. REH and C.L. Moore are probably the most consistent. Fritz Leiber wrote some stories as good as any one you could name (and I mean anyone) and some that were awful. I'd recommend Swords against Death as one of the strongest S&S collections, but his final Fafhrd and The Gray Mouser story "Mouser goes Below" was just awful.
    So you have to take the good with the bad. That said the good is very good.

  • @jasongeis679
    @jasongeis679 Před rokem

    I think one of the things that makes Steven Erikson’s Malazan series so different from other epic fantasy is that it reads like tight sword and sorcery expanded to its’ most epic proportions. I believe you had started reading the series and I’d be curious to know if you agree. Aside from that, modern fantasy seems sadly lacking in S&S, unfortunately.

  • @jackkaraquazian
    @jackkaraquazian Před rokem +1

    Can't argue with any of your recommendations, such a great group of authors.
    Moorcock coined the contemporary meaning of the word multiverse, so came before DC's version, though they did ask him to come up with an explanation for their multiverse at one point. Wagner also did a Kane/Elric crossover.

  • @OliverBrackenbury
    @OliverBrackenbury Před 5 měsíci

    I'm a big fan of Brian Murphy's flexible definition of S&S. Have you read his book "Flame & Crimson: A History of Sword & Sorcery"?

    • @michaelk.vaughan8617
      @michaelk.vaughan8617  Před 5 měsíci +1

      Not yet.

    • @OliverBrackenbury
      @OliverBrackenbury Před 5 měsíci

      @@michaelk.vaughan8617 Aw, it's GREAT stuff. I can't recommend it highly enough, and I bet there's a good video to be had in talking about it.

  • @Kikilang60
    @Kikilang60 Před rokem +1

    If anyone has ever been fifteen and in a used book store, with a pocket full of change, they have read some of these books. I just now picked up The Best of C.L. Moore with a pink sticker that says $.25. I aways wonder how you know so much.

    • @michaelk.vaughan8617
      @michaelk.vaughan8617  Před rokem

      I’m just old and read every day. That’s all it takes!

    • @Kikilang60
      @Kikilang60 Před rokem

      @@michaelk.vaughan8617 If your old, you're hiding it well.

  • @kenward1310
    @kenward1310 Před rokem

    It's a fun genre which few, if any, authors seem to be writing nowadays. Any theories as to why? Scrolling through the S&S bestsellers in the Kindle Store you'll see a lot of self-published stuff, which is fine, but pretty much all of it would not qualify as S&S. Are today's S&S authors being crowded out by miscategorized non-S&S books?

    • @michaelk.vaughan8617
      @michaelk.vaughan8617  Před rokem +1

      The trend in fantasy has definitely gone to the epic, gigantic, high fantasy books that have done so well in the wake of Game of Thrones. S&S definitely seems to get less respect or interest.

  • @AAron-gr3jk
    @AAron-gr3jk Před rokem

    Have you read Warbreaker? What did you think of it?

  • @tommonk7651
    @tommonk7651 Před rokem

    You might try the Greatcoats series by Sebastien de Castell. I'm currently on the 4th and currently last book of the series. It's a fun series.

    • @michaelk.vaughan8617
      @michaelk.vaughan8617  Před rokem

      I’ve read the first two Greatcoats books so far. I really enjoyed them.

    • @tommonk7651
      @tommonk7651 Před rokem

      @@michaelk.vaughan8617 I'm just starting the 4th. Nice adventure/sword & sorcery with just a pinch of humor. BTW have you read any Ed Brubaker. His crime stuff is great. Got me reading comics again after decades.

  • @Abhisheksengupta923
    @Abhisheksengupta923 Před rokem

    No Wicher by Andrzej Sapkowski !

  • @davidbooks.and.comics

    I am surprised at how good the Imaro novels are. On their own the books are just great sword and sorcery novels.

  • @gabriellaycock5209
    @gabriellaycock5209 Před rokem

    The Corum novels are superb, but that cover's not right.

  • @BookBlather
    @BookBlather Před rokem +2

    If we’re giving a lot of weight to influence on the genre, I think Margaret Weis & Tracey Hickman would need to be included on a S&S list like this. Not as old as some of these others, but certainly pre-dated a lot by first hitting the scene in the mid-1980’s with their first DragonLance novels. Like them or not, it’s hard to deny their influence on S&S, with the DragonLance universe alone racking up nearly 200 books and roping in countless authors. Plus, their books are just plain fun 😊

  • @DDB168
    @DDB168 Před rokem

    Sadly the Kane books are quite difficult to find cheaply. The Mouser and Imaro series sound interesting. Stephen Donaldson's Thomas Covenant series (the first 3 anyway) are pretty good but he's getting cancelled, so you better read it before it gets difficult to find.

    • @Steve_Stowers
      @Steve_Stowers Před rokem

      I wouldn't classify Thomas Covenant as Sword & Sorcery but rather as Epic Fantasy or High Fantasy (a la The Lord of the Rings).

    • @DDB168
      @DDB168 Před rokem

      @@Steve_Stowers Oh ok. I tend to lump it all together, but I was wondering why there was no LotR in his list 😂

    • @michaelk.vaughan8617
      @michaelk.vaughan8617  Před rokem

      I have the first two Covenant trilogies, safe and sound.

  • @DuckRon626
    @DuckRon626 Před rokem

    Do the Gor novels by John Norman qualify as S&S? I read a bunch of those 35-40 years ago . I enjoyed them , but, they did get seriously knocked as being feminist. Probably rightly so , but, beyond that they were a lot of fun to read.

    • @michaelk.vaughan8617
      @michaelk.vaughan8617  Před rokem

      They are more sword and planet in the tradition of John Carter. Close though.

  • @thekeywitness
    @thekeywitness Před rokem +5

    I get the impression that today’s fantasy readers don’t go for books with covers depicting barrel-chested heroes with bloodied swords. It’s too intimidating. 😂 They prefer “strong female characters” and their clever friends who go on a quest together and no ever gets their skull split to the teeth. 😂

    • @donaldrobers5028
      @donaldrobers5028 Před rokem +2

      No one gets their skull split to the teeth? And they call that entertainment?

  • @JosesAmazingWorlds
    @JosesAmazingWorlds Před rokem

    I disagree with you big time about Elric being greatly written. But as an idea or concept, yes, it’s brilliant