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Weird Tales Magazine No. 366: Sword & Sorcery Issue

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Tales of blood, magic, and steel by masters of the craft! Stories, essays, and poetry

Kevin J. Anderson Bruce Boston Greg Cox Dana Fredsti & David Fitzgerald Neil Gaiman Teel James Glenn Maxwell I. Gold Howard Andrew Jones Brian W. Matthews Greg Mollin James A. Moore Weston Ochse Marguerite Reed Charles R. Rutledge Jane Yolen

Audible Audio

First published January 1, 2022

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Various

1,357 followers
Various is the correct author for any book with multiple unknown authors, and is acceptable for books with multiple known authors, especially if not all are known or the list is very long (over 50).

If an editor is known, however, Various is not necessary. List the name of the editor as the primary author (with role "editor"). Contributing authors' names follow it.

Note: WorldCat is an excellent resource for finding author information and contents of anthologies.

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5 stars
8 (21%)
4 stars
14 (36%)
3 stars
15 (39%)
2 stars
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Displaying 1 - 9 of 9 reviews
Profile Image for Jason Waltz.
Author 37 books78 followers
March 7, 2023
This was bizarre. Art was odd, selections were odd. Howard Andrew Jones saves this with hands down the best piece. His story garners 2 of the 3 stars.
Profile Image for Dan.
175 reviews8 followers
April 23, 2025
Another solid 3.5
I’ve always maintained that I have a strained relationship with fantasy-but the truth is, I probably don’t read enough of it to make that claim. I LOVE Tolkien (LOTR, The Silmarillion, all of it), but his stuff feels so high and mythic that it exists in a sphere all its own (I’ve heard people call it “High Fantasy”, which makes me think of the distinction from old High German and Low German, and I rather like the language analogy). Le Guin’s Earthsea is the closest thing I’ll ever utter near Tolkien’s name. But beyond that? I’ve somehow dodged names like Sanderson, Brooks, Jordan, etc.-and I think the rise of “romantasy” may have warped my sense of what the genre even is anymore.
So, I went backwards. This issue is a tribute to “Sword and Sorcery”-the dark, pulpy, sometimes grimy ancestor of modern fantasy (thanks in large part to the works of Robert E. Howard). -and honestly? I liked it. The tone is weird and bloody and dark (maybe even GRIMDARK! Note to self: get around to reading Joe Abercrombie no matter how much the internet tells you not to). I wasn’t always sold on some of the characters in these stories, mostly because of modern sensibilities, and there were some moments I rolled my eyes a little, but overall I was entertained, and most times I got to that point of being “over it”, it got dark and weird and pulled me back in.
Again, there’s also a mix of essays, poetry and interviews! It was really cool; I really like the set up of this magazine. Some of the standouts for me:

"Cold Ice, Red Blood" by Kevin J. Anderson
"Guardian of the Sapphire Sword" by Greg Cox (I enjoyed the perspective of this one, basically from the "monster's" POV, the D&D side characters were annoying though).
"Temm the Riven" by Brian W. Matthews
"Sword & Sorcery: Weird Tales and Beyond" by Charles Rutledge (Great essay about Robert Howard and the development of S&S, re-read from "100 Years of Weird")
"An Interview with Michael Moorcock" by Weston Ochse
"On Michael Moorcock" by Neil Gaiman

I listened to the audio version, and while it was fantastic, due to some rights issues they had to leave out the Michael Moorcock story which was a bummer, because I was most looking forward to reading him (since I never have). If that’s a deal breaker, seek out a physical or e-book version.
Final verdict: This issue made me rethink my assumptions about fantasy a bit. If this is the spirit that sword and sorcery brings to the table-strange magic, doomed heroes, fast pacing, moral gray zones-then maybe I’m more of a fantasy reader than I thought. Or at least the kind that likes his wizards cursed and his swords…cursed-er? Anyway, if I’ve learned anything from this experience it’s that it’s high time I read through all of Conan the Barbarian, and give Howard his due.
Profile Image for Mike Perschon.
87 reviews14 followers
July 5, 2024
A solid collection of Sword and Sorcery stories, essays, and poems. There was only one weak story, and even that was mildly entertaining. Recommended for those who prefer their fantasy with some edge.
210 reviews3 followers
June 29, 2023
This was a very entertaining issue with a good mix of stories and articles. It definitely scratched my S&S itch.

Profile Image for mabuse cast.
210 reviews9 followers
March 15, 2024
A pretty solid collection of Sword & Sorcery stories,essays,poems, and a new interview with author Michael Moorcock! It has its fair share of stories that are just fine as you might expect from a collection like this but there are some real gems here that outweigh the just average ones!

P.S. The audiobook version of this issue does not include the new Michael Moorcock story due to rights issues so if you want that story get the physical version of this issue!
Profile Image for Matthew Bane.
262 reviews3 followers
February 7, 2024
4.25 out of 5

Very entertaining. Some of the stories are so good I didn't want them to end.

The interview with Morecock was a nice touch. I haven't read anything from him before, but it sounds like I really need to.
Profile Image for Marty Solotki.
457 reviews2 followers
June 20, 2024
So much to choose from in this! Lots of action and adventure, and some good history of the genre.
Displaying 1 - 9 of 9 reviews