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| SFReader Forums > Book, Magazine, and eZine Publishers > Flashing Swords > More on the very cool thing this summer | Forum Quick Jump
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|  Nik Adept

       Date Joined Feb 2007 Total Posts : 774 | Posted 3/17/2008 8:07 PM (GMT -4) |   | The excerpts speak well of the issue. Some of my favorite authors in here--I'm especially very anxious to read of the latest exploits of Bone and Gaunt. Nicholas Ian Hawkins
Forthcoming "What Heroes Leave Behind," in Return of the Sword, Flashing Swords Press, March 2008 "Knowledge and Dust," in Magic & Mechanica, from Ricasso Press, Spring 2008
Published "The Weald Maiden's Will," in Every Day Fiction, March 5, 2008 "Relativity," in FLASHSHOT, September 28, 2007
Visit my website, Trampler of Beautiful Phrases, at nihawkins.wordpress.com | | Back to Top | | |
 |  Scribe Stablehand
        Date Joined Mar 2008 Total Posts : 1 | Posted 3/17/2008 9:10 PM (GMT -4) |   | I've already seen one of the drawing that Richard's going to use to accompany my article The Era of Fairies and Dragons. This is going to be a wonderful issue, by all accounts!
www.writingrealm.com | | Back to Top | | |
 |  J.F. Keeping Stablehand
        Date Joined Mar 2008 Total Posts : 9 | Posted 3/18/2008 12:23 AM (GMT -4) |   | |
No one is more excited about this issue than me, because it contains my VERY FIRST PAID PUBLICATION! Woo hoo! So let me thank the Wizard of the Crystal and everyone else at Flashing Swords for overlooking the cardboard characters, cliched plot, and overwrought language (just kidding!).
I'm very happy to supply an excerpt, because, conveniently enough, I wrote my story with a teaser:
THE CROOKED BLADE
No one saw the figure approach; before they knew it, it was upon them, sword flashing red in the dying sunlight. Markl and Brand fell before they could do more than raise their weapons. Marrish saw his son's severed head strike the ground and roll to his feet. >>
> >
Grabbing his spear from the back of their little cart, Marrish yelled to his wife to flee. She whipped the reins and the cart jerked into motion as he turned to face their attacker. >>
> >
He had no more than the impression of a wide-brimmed peasant’s hat and a dark cloak before the apparition was upon him. He thrust, trying to retain the advantage of reach, but his opponent sprang aside, his cloak swirling like bat’s wings. Then he brought his blade down upon the haft of Marrish’s spear. The sword sang and the stout oak snapped like a twig.>>
> >
Marrish took a few steps backward and shifted the spear haft into a quarterstaff grip. His opponent darted toward him and he brought down the staff in a skull-crushing blow. But the cloaked figure caught it on an upraised forearm, and though there was the sound of bone breaking, there was no response from the cold eyes which glinted beneath the wide hat.>>
> >
Instead, the figure ducked forward and brought up his blade under Marrish’s guard. Fire exploded in Marrish’s belly as the sword thrust deep into him. He held his killer’s eyes for a heartbeat; then the blade was withdrawn and he crumpled slowly to the ground.>>
> >
As he lay there feeling his life’s blood seep into the dirt, Marrish turned his head and with satisfaction saw the cart with his wife and youngest child receding rapidly into the distance. He heard the crunch of boots upon the dirt road, then the sound of something heavy being dragged toward him. With an effort he flipped his head back over to see the lifeless eyes of his second son staring into his own. Then a dark-clad figure sat down upon his son’s corpse, as if it were a stool. >>
> >
Marrish tried to speak, but discovered his mouth was full of blood. He spat it out and gasped one word: “Wh-why?”>>
> >
The hat turned as the figure gazed in the direction of the receding cart. “Is this the road to Bellifas?” rasped an inhuman voice.>>
> >
Marrish’s cheek scraped against the dirt as he nodded once, twice. Then, as if expecting his courtesy to rewarded in kind, he asked again: “Why?”>>
> >
“I am going home,” was his killer’s only reply.
>[OPENING CREDITS]> | | Back to Top | | |
  |  Bruce Durham Crom's Administrator & Drinking Buddy

       Date Joined Jan 2005 Total Posts : 613 | Posted 3/19/2008 5:23 PM (GMT -4) |   | Here's a bit from the opening of my piece. It's a slightly different take on a popular tale.
______________________________________________________________________
DELUGE
“I will take those,” Asmadu said in broken Achaean, pointing at two goats in the half-crowded pen. “That one and that one.” He displayed a pair of fingers. “Two.”
The merchant, a slender Minoan, bobbed his head and smiled, displaying bad teeth.
Asmadu glanced over his shoulder. “Namhu, you have a firm grasp of their tongue. I want that male and that female.”
Namhu stepped up, a younger version of his stocky parent. “Why not spin him one of your tales, Father? That should be good enough barter for these animals.”
Asmadu placed a wrinkled hand on his son’s shoulder. “If I was fluent in their tongue, I would. But I am not, and that is why I asked you to speak for me. Now, haggle with the man.”
The boy nodded sheepishly before launching into an animated conversation with the merchant.
Asmadu watched the interaction for several moments before joining his wife Puduhepa at a stall piled high with an assortment of fabrics.
Gracing him with a warm smile, she fingered a bolt of cloth with work-hardened fingers. “Nice weave.” She dropped it and pointed. “Oh, see that cloak? What an interesting color on the border.”
Asmadu reached for the garment and touched the fabric. “Purple, they call it, produced from a mollusk local to Tyre. Much too expensive for us.” Come visit the Community Forums of CPI's Official Site of Conan author Robert E. Howard
Recently published: Valley of Bones in Return of the Sword, Night of the Meld in Flashing Swords #9, Marathon in Issue #10 of Paradox, Kalini Steel in Freehold: Southern Storm, Fool's Treasure in Freehold: The Protector and Old Havana in When the World Runs Thin
Upcoming: Abuse of Power in Flashing Swords #10 and Deluge in the Special Summer Issue of Flashing Swords
www.brucedurham.ca | | Back to Top | | |
 |  crystalwizard Forum Moderator

       Date Joined Nov 2006 Total Posts : 4740 | Posted 3/19/2008 6:45 PM (GMT -4) |   | | | |
 |  Nik Adept

       Date Joined Feb 2007 Total Posts : 774 | Posted 3/19/2008 7:09 PM (GMT -4) |   | Mark S. said... Congrats to all of us who are in it! ;) Here's my opening line:
Though he might die, Emren would welcome being inside the coliseum walls just to get away from the unforgiving sun.
Nice! Nicholas Ian Hawkins
Forthcoming "Knowledge and Dust," in Magic & Mechanica, from Ricasso Press, Spring 2008
Published "What Heroes Leave Behind," in Return of the Sword, Flashing Swords Press, March 2008 "The Weald Maiden's Will," in Every Day Fiction, March 5, 2008 "Relativity," in FLASHSHOT, September 28, 2007
Visit my website, Trampler of Beautiful Phrases, at nihawkins.wordpress.com | | Back to Top | | |
 |  SC Bryce Aspiring Hammock Tester

       Date Joined Jan 2005 Total Posts : 1089 | Posted 3/19/2008 7:58 PM (GMT -4) |   | | | |
      |  crystalwizard Forum Moderator

       Date Joined Nov 2006 Total Posts : 4740 | Posted 3/21/2008 11:16 PM (GMT -4) |   | | | |
  |  erazmus Master

       Date Joined Jul 2005 Total Posts : 4503 | Posted 3/22/2008 11:37 AM (GMT -4) |   | | | |
 |  crystalwizard Forum Moderator

       Date Joined Nov 2006 Total Posts : 4740 | Posted 3/22/2008 11:47 AM (GMT -4) |   | erazmus said... Our thinking was-- we got too much good stuff to cram into four issues this year! We could just skim off the cream, we _did_ just skim off the cream, still too much for four issues. We could fill up and just let a bunch go elsewhere, to flat rate markets who nobody ever remembers, but we thought these tales deserved to be featured. We could have expanded to a bi monthly schedual, but then we considered that the staff had lives once, and S-O's who'd like to see us occassionally, so we comprimised-- a special summer issue! More stories for you, not too much more work for us. At least thats how I remember it.
Mike
That's a very nicely worded explanation of several emails and quite a bit of discussion, Mike :) Yes, that's what our thinking was. | | Back to Top | | |
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