Valerio Massimo Manfredi’s The Last Legion is a stand alone novel from 2002. This is a 425 page novel set in the late 5th Century A.D. The novel starts in late 476 in Italy. Warlord Odoacer makes his move to remove the last Roman emperor, the young Romulus Augustulus.
Standing in the way is the Nova Invicta Legion. This is a unit made up of Romans, not barbarians, trained and outfitted like an old Roman legion. The Nova Invicta fights against Odoacer’s Germanic barbarians allowing legionary Aurelianus to warn the emperor. Read More
Every week, the Castalia House Blog spotlights some of the many new releases in independent, pulp, and web novel-influenced science fiction and fantasy.
Caleb Card always knew that fighting back against overwhelming odds would be a thankless slog. And with Legion forces expanding across the galaxy, his opportunities to hit them where it hurts are fast running out. When a well-played hand and an unexpected betrayal nearly put a stop to both the rebellion and his life, all signs point to a quick and ugly end.
Only Caleb’s never quit anything before, and he isn’t about to start now. Not when he still has a few more aces up his sleeve…
…and with any luck, a Queen.
John the Balladeer – Manly Wade Wellman
In John the Balladeer, Manly Wade Wellman created one of the great characters in all of horror and fantasy literature. Armed with his silver-stringed guitar and an endless trove of folk songs, John travels the backwoods of Appalachia, battling supernatural evil with his own brand of down-home charm and endless resourcefulness. In these tales, John wanders the Southern mountains, encountering hoodoo men and witch women, strange supernatural beasts, malevolent spirits, and even George Washington’s ghost.
Edited by horror legend Karl Edward Wagner, this volume contains the complete John the Balladeer stories in their original, unaltered form, as they first appeared in magazines and anthologies between 1951 and 1987. Also featured are a foreword by Wellman’s friend and literary executor David Drake and an introduction by Wagner.
“Just as J. R. R. Tolkien brilliantly created a modern British myth cycle, so did Manly Wade Wellman give to us an imaginary world of purely American fact, fantasy and song.” – Karl Edward Wagner
“This is the real thing-a book of haunting fantasies with their roots going down deep into the American folk tradition.” – Robert Silverberg
Sometimes, tragedy is unavoidable. How one copes with it, however, is entirely within one’s control.
The same goes for fears. How one faces their worst fears, is within their control, and speaks volumes.
But what do you do when the object of your fear both knows your weaknesses, and is actively pursuing you?
Following a traumatic encounter with a new foe, Uriel and his team are in a bit of a dark place.
Worse, another of this world’s false gods has emerged, and is after Uriel and his team. While they’re faced powerful enemies before, this one is different, coming for them in ways they are not prepared for.
Now, it’s a race against time as Uriel and his team must try to kill her before her power becomes too great for them to have even a hope of victory.
Meanwhile Setzell, who had just recently faced a painful aspect of her past, now has to face her greatest fears, and embrace who and what she is, if she’s to overcome those who tried to turn her into a monster.
Hunted and on the run inside the fabled and dangerous City of Thieves, U.S. Army Ranger Sniper Sergeant Thor must pull the greatest fade of his career as powerful sorcerers and conniving eunuchs dispatch small armies of deadly mercenaries and vicious hired killers to track down and take what Thor has stolen fair and square.
But other dangers await the Ranger inside the wild and untamed alleys, temples, once-mighty fortresses, and degenerate palaces of the Ruin’s greatest and most ancient of cities. Intrigue, betrayal, and mystery abound in this taut tightwire run-for-your-life dash to deceive and best the enemies who have unwisely set themselves against the lethal Sergeant Thor.
In the City of Thieves, the game doesn’t stop after the bodies hit the floor. Assassins, bandits, warriors, wizards, monsters, and gods are all out to get Thor before a fabled treasure slips through their grasp, and disappears forever.
In a fantastic city caught between its diabolical devils and the deep blue sea, legendary for its larceny, lies, and licentiousness, Sergeant Thor must be more cunning than the best the City of Thieves has to offer in order to survive and win.
The Hunters, become the Hunted.
This is a guest post by Shogun Montgomery:
All exorcism/demonic possession films are viewed through the comparative lens with The Exorcist. In 1973, William Peter Blatty achieved the height of cinematic horror with that film by treating the topic with the gravity it deserves. There is no disillusionment about Reagan’s possession in the tone of the film. The possession is a life or death situation determined by the spiritual leadership of the exorcist.
T.V. (Art of Manliness): If you have only passing familiarity with The Twilight Zone — maybe only really knowing its iconic opening sequence — you might be forgiven for thinking that the classic television show centered on scary themes. In reality, however, while the show certainly had a dark atmosphere and included plenty of suspense, creepiness, and dread, it fell more into the genres of science fiction and fantasy than horror.
Robert E. Howard (REH World): Swords of the North – the Ultimate Edition – Coming soon!
The definitive collection of Robert E. Howard’s Celtic/Viking adventure stories. The book checks in at around 500 pages, and will be printed in hardback with dust jacket. Edited by Rob Roehm and Paul Herman. Cover art by Mark Wheatley and introduction by Rusty Burke.
Fiction (E.F. Benson the Other Novels): The purpose of this blog is to review, and to gather together other critics’ opinions of, the entire works of E F Benson. ‘Fred’ is known today almost exclusively for his Mapp and Lucia novels and his ghost (‘spook’) stories, but in his day he was a popular and versatile author, whose career of almost 50 years saw him tackle a wide range of subjects in both fiction and non-fiction. Read More
My introduction to horror fiction was through Robert E. Howard. I began reading his horror in collections such as The Book of Robert E. Howard and The Howard Collector. Then I moved on to H. P. Lovecraft and then the Lovecraft Circle. My horror reading still tends to be Weird Tales centric. Personal favorites include Donald Wandrei, Manly Wade Wellman’s Weird Tales fiction, Weird Tales period Ray Bradbury, and Carl Jacobi.
I first read Carl Jacobi (“The Pit”) in the the anthology Weird Tales #1 (Zebra Books, 2nd printing 1983) in late summer 1983. I lucked out in April 1984 when Phantom of the Attic on South Craig Street in Pittsbugh had the Jove reprint of the Arkham House collection Revelations in Black. I devoured that in shorteorder appeciating Jacobi’s precise prose in the short story format. His stories were traditional with Gothic atmosphere. They read like horror stories. He was one of those strong second stringers for Weird Tales magazine in its hey day that added to the later legend. Read More
Every week, the Castalia House Blog spotlights some of the many new releases in independent, pulp, and web novel-influenced science fiction and fantasy.
Reunited with his family, Tristan struggles to find common ground to build a relationship with Lujan Sergey, commander of the Unified Worlds’ special forces and the father he’s never known. A new universe is beginning to open for him when a new crisis occurs, and Tristan is pressed to volunteer for hazardous service.
The alien masuk slavers are about to attack the Issel system and only Tristan, once held captive there, knows the planetary defenses well enough to penetrate them. But he’ll have to pass the demanding Spherzah training—and conquer the demons in his own past—in order to participate.
A new war threatens, and it will take all of the Sergey family to survive it. But when an assassin tries to intervene, will all of the family still be alive to see it through?
The Great Serpent has given a great gift—if only Dax can understand it in time.
With the attack on the Great Serpent stopped, Dax and his friends return to the Academy having changed. They no longer fear the Cult of the Dragon, but the Order now knows of their involvement.
The Academy can only protect them so much.
When Dax discovers strange sentient creatures in the forest near the Academy, he fears the Order has a new plan to attack the empire.
He’ll need to master his essence if he wants to have any chance to understand it. Even that might not be enough to stop the danger that’s coming.
Martel has begun his studies. He’s made a few friends, but most of all, his powers grow.
While hesitant to use fire magic, it’s saved him more than once, and his gift for destruction is undeniable. But others take note, and protecting his secret only gets more difficult. Every day bears the risk that his talent is discovered, and the Empire will force him to fight their conflicts.
Those same wars that flood Morcaster with problems and cause clashes between Asterians and Khivan immigrants, including Martel’s friends.
With every battle on the distant front, the war grows closer, the dead and wounded return in numbers, and the anger threatens to boil over. As tempers become enflamed, the spark of a fire-touched could set the city ablaze – or save it.
A dark dragon awakened.
A thunder god returned.
An immortal empire balanced on the edge of a whisper.
As god-protector of the heavens, Ji Yu Raijin is the only one who can stop the universe-ending power of the Dragon. If he fails, everything he’s fought so hard to save will be destroyed, and his immortal throne will be lost forever.
The full might of his enemies is arrayed against him. Legions of cunning immortals, powerful cultivators, and deathless demons stand in his path—but they aren’t the greatest obstacle he faces.
The first time Raijin was betrayed and cast from the heavens, it was with his immortal wife’s sword in his back.
Can he trust Koida to help him retake the throne, or will she stay true to her nature and betray him again? Read More
Conan (Sprague de Camp Fan): The new Conan adventures are starting to pile up faster than I can read them. This one is not really new though. It was originally serialized in Marvel Comics Conan the Barbarian (2019) issues 1 through 12. I didn’t read it then. Like most, I imagine, I decided to wait until all 12 issues were in my hand so I could read the whole thing in one or two sittings. But after a year passes other things are bought and other things are added to the pile.
Games (Walker’s Retreat): Which means we’re getting Hyborea for ACKS. And that is a massive win. It’s been years since Mongoose did their surprisingly decent adaptation (the first edition) with its excellent The Road of Kings setting book, and I cannot wait to see that surpassed with which Macris and Dixon can do now that so much of Howard’s work either is Public Domain or will be soon.
D&D (Jon Mollison): It turns out I’m not the only one playing AD&D solo these days. I’m not even the only one with a blog discussing the results of my solo play. Today I present to you “Fort Cranium“, a newish quick recommendation today. He started with a 5×5 map of 30 mile hexes, which are subdivided into 5 mile hexes of their own, a large are with plenty of room to explore, loot, and colonize. Make sure you stick around for future episodes to see how a few dice rolls can spin up a wholy different experience. Read More
One of the library book sale finds was a pristine paperback of Thomas Harris’ Red Dragon. This is the thriller novel that put serial killers on the map. The book was first published in 1981. There were other novels that had serial killers (James Ellroy) but Harris took it to the next level.
The mass paperback is 354 pages. The novel starts with Will Graham visited by his old boss Crawford from the F.B.I. Crawford wants Graham to look into the murders of two families space a month apart. Graham has been retired after putting Dr. Hannibal Lector away a few years earlier. There is a race against time before the killer butchers another family in a month. Read More
Every week, the Castalia House Blog spotlights some of the many new releases in independent, pulp, and web novel-influenced science fiction and fantasy.
A wedding. A mysterious entity. A dangerous lineage.
Jules is ready to get married. If only things were that simple.
Dean is contacted by someone known only as Friend and told about a drifting vessel on the edges of Alliance space. What he finds on board is a shock to everyone.
When Jules appears on an alien world with one of Earth’s most notorious criminals, she must fight to survive and find her way home.
The Alliance may be the Survivors biggest test yet, but with Jules and Dean, they always have the answers. At least, they used to…
The Altar of Hate – Vox Day
“DOWNRIGHT EVIL”
Vox Day is one of the most intelligent, most eclectic, and most dangerous writers of his generation. With a literary range that spans from philosophy and economic commentary to epic fantasy and science fiction, he has been banned from every major social media platform and is forbidden by name from setting foot inside Google’s headquarters in Mountain View, California.
“Vox Day rises all the way to ‘downright evil’. “
-Patrick Nielsen Hayden, Tor Books
THE ALTAR OF HATE is a collection of his short fiction that is unrelated to his ARTS OF DARK AND LIGHT or his QUANTUM MORTIS series. The stories include tales of blood feuds in Venice, diplomatic assassinations, scientific genocide, cyberpunk, magical journeys into the distant past, and the selling of infernal machines.
After being transported to a fantasy world full of supernatural beauty and weirdness, Joe has forged himself a place in the community of Lockwood. Now he has a home, a place he belongs, and people he cares about. After finding loopholes in the strange ability conferred by the goddess Quinn, he has enriched and delighted his new friends.
However, despite solving local problems ranging from sanitation to monster attacks, Joe’s work is not done. There are powers in the world who are seeking Joe. Some might be friendly, some not so friendly.
Some of those around him are also hiding secrets. Some need help. Some might even help him when he needs it most. And most of all, Joe is about to learn that his deal with the Goddess Quinn will complicate his life in ways he could have never anticipated.
After the Tortoise Spire climb claims three members of Team Guiding Star Legacy, surviving combat experts Nieve and Hane—teammates by chance if not by choice—cope with their losses by joining another delving group to ascend Tiger Spire. Allied with bickering siblings Rose and Mason, an Architect and a Transmuter, and the Biomancer Lief, they’re led by Odette, an Analyst, who has meticulously studied the spire’s scenarios to locate the mythical Vault of Shadows and claim its priceless treasures.
Their quest takes them aboard a train transporting rare cargo, but their mission is vague. Odette believes they’re either supposed to protect the cargo or capture someone. As the team splits into factions to solve the mystery, they encounter the notorious thief known as the Magpie. Sa’rhi Nereux is a Controller, commanding powerful minions to help them steal a creature capable of granting life or death with a single bite.
Even if the adventurers are victorious, greater threats await them within the spire if they’re to unearth the Vault of Shadows. Nieve, still grieving her lost companions, wants to befriend her new team to face these threats together. But Hane prefers distance, even from Nieve, leaving her to bond instead with a being of unimaginable power . . . Read More
Conan (Sprague de Camp Fan): This one starts with Conan raiding a caravan. A bloody business for sure and Dixon doesn’t shy away from describing the slaughter. Everyone, except for a young male soldier, is unmercifully slaughtered. After the killing is done one of Conan’s men, Zekir al Khoraj, is upset that their raid did not result in capturing any women to rape and suggests this last captive will suffice.
Weird Tales (M Porcius): Today we wrangle some stories from the February 1938 issue, including works by the premier Weird Tales writer, New England’s Howard Phillips Lovecraft, and one of our favorite scribblers, Henry Kuttner, the young man from California. And in the spirit of exploration which I like to think characterizes this journey, we’ll read two stories by individuals we’ve never read before, one by Clifford Ball and one by M. G. Moretti.
Games (Walker’s Retreat): What would RIFTS look like if it were a competent product? Remaking this product into a complete, comprehensive, and competent fantastic adventure game means doing the following: Designing, testing, and perfecting a complete tabletop wargame whose rules and procedures scale up seamlessly from Man To Man to Massive Fleet Battles & Cosmic Entity Combat- all going on simultaneously (i.e. the scales interact). Read More
October: The leaves are changing, the days are getting shorter, the temperatures are getting colder. I generally set aside more blood and thunder fiction and read weird/supernatural/horror until Halloween.
A series that has really grown on me is Wordsworth’s Tales of Mystery & the Supernatural. This series started in 2006 and lasted until petering out in 2015. Richard, who guest blogs here now and then, sent me the E. F. Benson collection and I think the Henry S. Whitehead collection.
These books are great. Trade paperbacks priced very affordably. Wordsworth mainly reprinted fiction out of copyright. The emphasis was on pre-pulp British ghost writers. I currently have 2 Le Fanu, M. R. James, and W. F. Harvey collections on my coffee table for nightly reading until October 31st. Read More
Every week, the Castalia House Blog spotlights some of the many new releases in independent, pulp, and web novel-influenced science fiction and fantasy.
When a power greater than the Chain Breaker rips through his realm, Gavin must become more.
When a strange power breaks into Gavin’s world from the other realm, he must find a way to stop it—and the ones responsible for forcing open the dangerous vents of power that let terrifying creatures into his world. But too many openings are forming.
Gavin and his allies don’t have the numbers.
Worse, when the truth about these openings is revealed, Gavin fears a war unlike the world has seen in ages will return.
And he may be the only thing standing in the way—if he can control his changing power in time.
In the heart of the wilderness, a ravenous hunger lurks…
After a narrow escape from Tumbling Rapids, Kay and his mentor, Eleniah, embark on an exhilarating journey into the unknown. Eleniah has grand designs for her new protégé and plans to mold him into a force of nature, capable of withstanding whatever the world can throw at him. And her chosen classroom? A monster-infested stretch of wilderness, where no one would be stupid—or crazy—enough to venture.
But when a motley crew of refugees and adventurers unexpectedly intrudes upon their solitude, Kay’s training takes an unforeseen twist. Leadership is suddenly thrust upon him and, like it or not, he now has an entire settlement to look after.
Juggling his new responsibilities while simultaneously advancing his Classes and Skills should be challenge enough, but unfortunately there’s a far more ominous threat lurking beneath the surface of their new home. Something hungry. Something vicious. Something bloodthirsty. And Key’s idyllic little hamlet looks like the perfect meal…
“Swift as hares, fierce as wolves!”
Born into the Scarlet Rabbit’s mercenary company, Sakura Ike learned the art of combat before she learned how to serve tea as a Geisha. For her, fighting in a CASPer mech suit is as natural as breathing.
The job was simple: get down to the planet Wh’ton, retrieve the box, come home, and get paid. Easy. But then tragedy struck, and the only family she had left was her aunt Katsume and a mother that never loved her.
There is no time to grieve; Sakura must find the answers before the trail goes cold, and she loses her chance at revenge. But she can’t do it alone. Together with her best friend Jeni, the shell-shocked Newsom, the mysterious Jung, and the alien warrior Taka, they must band together to hunt down the Rabbits’ betrayer. The good news is Katsume has built brand new cyber battlesuits for them. The bad news is a fledgling Yakuza crime family wants to take them out before they fulfill their ultimate mission.
Will the Gunpowder Geishas get the revenge they seek, or will they become yet another failed Phoenix Initiative merc company?
The Tosoma has been dutifully repaired attempts to escape when Naats, in service of the Arkonide Empire, descend upon the Web, demanding the ship and its crew.
Meanwhile, Aescunnar makes an astonishing discovery while trying to recover Hetcher on Mars. Signs of an ancient civilization are found on the Red Planet. More startling still: they may not have left…
On Topsid, Manoli is now heading for the Wise Ones’ Stronghold, a mountain refuge for their most revered figures. But the climb will be far from easy—and will a human even be allowed into such a sacred place? Elsewhere, the despot obsesses over his unseemly “collection” of Arkonide captives.
Back on Earth, Bai Jun’s questions are about to be answered. Administrator Adams orders him to evacuate the entire city of Terrania as a precursor to a grand reveal. What are the secrets of the Stardust Tower—and the administrator’s plans for it?