The original version of this page can be found at : http://forum.sfreader.com/default.aspx?f=5&m=72306
| Posted By : crystalwizard - 3/9/2008 2:05 AM | So let's start with a slightly larger look at this:
Special Poster
Think you might want a copy of that?
You can get one.
11 inches x 17 inches
Free!
All you have to do is buy a copy of the Special Summer Issue and email me a copy of your receipt.
The table of contents looks like this:
This Being the Tale of Cap’n Jethro ‘Fair-cut’ Henderson, Mutinous Matthews, the Thief, the Whore, the French Fop and the Treasure of Freeport. by Lee Reynoldson
Deluge by Bruce Durham
Document of Destiny by Chad Weiss
Dragon Fire by Sarah Ashwood
Elements By R.F. Long
Entering Blood City By Mark Stawecki
Grim Faced Warrior by Michael Turner
Moronar's Chosen by Sarah Wagner
Oathbreaker's Promise by Christopher Heath
Prince Victor by By Edward McDermott
Steel in the Morning by D.J. Cockburn
The Era of Fairies and Dragons Article by Lisa Agnew
The Crooked Blade by J.F. Keeping
The Mermaid and the Mortal Thing by Chris Willrich
Vainglorious by Steve Goble
Worms in the Earth: Barbarian's Bane (With apologies to Robert E. Howard) by Charles A. Gramlich
And a special novella length story, Silent Dirge by Jared Evers
Illustrations by A.R. Stone, Jay Stevol, G.W. Thomas, Johnney Perkins, Brad Foster, Richard Fay and Miguel Santos
85,795 glorious words, marvelous illustrations and a free poster.
There's just one little catch.
This issue, which will be available from June 1, 2008 to September 30, 2008 in both print and .pdf ebook, will not be available to read online. You'll have to buy a copy if you want it.
And trust me, you'll want it.
So make plans now not to miss out.
(Johnney's special poster will also be available a larger size for those that wish to purchase them.) |

| Posted By : Jaqhama - 3/13/2008 10:44 AM | I like the pic.
Looks very Franzetta. You can read some of my stories here:
Swamp Story. Down South. Florida Haze.Wild Justice...
|

| Posted By : von Darkmoor - 3/13/2008 10:52 PM |
Jaqhama said... I like the pic.
Looks very Franzetta. Yeah! The artist will LOVE to read this!!!!!!
|

| Posted By : JeanLauzier - 3/16/2008 11:05 PM | | Nice poster!!! |




| Posted By : Hearthweru - 3/17/2008 12:25 AM |
I'm really pleased my first sale to FS made it into the summer special.
Here's a snippet from the story . . .
***
This Being the Tale of Cap’n Jethro ‘Fair-cut’ Henderson, Mutinous Matthews, the Thief, the Whore, the French Fop and the Treasure of Freeport.
By
Lee Reynoldson
The boy, known in Freeport as Piss-Pike, sat on the edge of the quay looking out to sea. He tried not think about food, but his stomach groaned like a hull fit to burst. He knew Sharkey would be grilling mackerel right about now. Without coin it was knowledge he could do without. So instead, he concentrated on the row boat headed for the wharf.
Two men sat at the oars pulling hearty, a third stood aft, braced and upright, hands behind his back. There was something about the man that nagged at Piss-Pike. He squinted into the morning mist, stared hard, forgot about his hunger for a moment.
The passenger looked, at first glance, like any other wharf-rat or jack-tar. His hair, black as a Clergyman’s breeches, was tied back in a pig-tail. He wore knee-length trews of the sort popular with any good rope-monkey. Underneath his gentleman's greatcoat he was bare-chested. Even from a distance he oozed the sort of command Piss-Pike expected from a captain not a crewman.
It couldn’t be him could it?
No, he wouldn’t be fool enough to come back to Freeport. Would he? Even if the story of his treasure were true he’d never live to claim it. Excited, Piss-Pike jumped to his feet.
#
Jethro stood aft, easy as a lubber might stand on land. The two oarsman looked at each other, in a way that he didn’t appreciate, and shipped their oars. The row boat rocked to a halt. He took his hands from behind his back and thrust them into the pockets of his greatcoat.
"Tired lads?"
The oarsman, called Fat Thomas, trailed a pudgy hand over his greasy hair. He sneered at Jethro. "Not so much tired as feeling undervalued."
His associate, a nervy looking stick of a man by the name of Rat Thatcher, grinned at Jethro.
Jethro nodded to himself. "Like that is it?"
"Aye, that be about the way of it friend," Rat Thatcher said.
Jethro noted how the man’s hand rested inside his jacket, knew he was meant to.
"Before I boarded your . . . vessel," Jethro said, "we agreed on a fair price in front of a witness."
"I don’t see no witness." Fat Thomas made a mock of casting about, hand over his brow, as if on lookout. He laughed and slapped Rat Thatcher on the back, then stood. He too seemed perfectly at home standing in the boat, hands on hips, fat gut rippling as he chuckled at his own wit. "Besides, that price don’t seem so fair now."
"Perhaps you’re right," Jethro said. "Perhaps it should cost me more if I want you to row me all the way to the shore."
"Now yer talking sense," Fat Thomas said.
"I’ll swim the rest of the way." Jethro put one foot on the edge of the boat.
"Not so fast." Fat Thomas slipped a small flintlock pistol from his sleeve to his palm. "Would be difficult to swim if you sprung a leak friend. Now ease yer hands out and nothing tricksy mind. I can empty pockets just as easy with you dead as alive."
Jethro nodded. "Unless I’m mistaken this is what you’re after." From his left pocket he pulled the fattest purse any pirate was like to see.
"Well I’ll be a whore’s bedpan!" Rat Thatcher said. "Will you look it the size of that purse."
Jethro tossed the purse up. It fell into his palm with a satisfying thump and a musical jingle. "Here," he said, and threw it to Fat Thomas.
The purse arced through the air. Both oarsmen watched it fly. Fat Thomas grabbed for it.
It was all the time Jethro needed . . .
***
I hope that little sample whets the appetite. I had to cut it off there before it got too bloodthirsty for a forum post. 
Grimble at Southern Ocean Review...
|

| Posted By : Dan Nelson - 3/17/2008 1:07 AM | By special issue are you saying this is issue 10 or 11 or outside of the regular issues? Dan Nelson
King of Nothing and Emperor of Emptiness |


| Posted By : Charles Gramlich - 3/17/2008 1:53 AM | What Arnold did for Barbarians like Conan, Farthane does for Necromancers. Uhm, almost!
WORMS IN THE EARTH: BARBARIAN'S BANE
In those days there were Worms in the Earth. Big worms. Gigantic! Worms so mighty that the earth shook with their writhings. And one day those worms came forth and attacked the shining cities of man. The destruction was really bad. --The Book of "Hopefully" Lost Tales
The barbarians were gone now, but that did little to cool the fevered hate that Farthane the necromancer felt for them. That hate was a black and coiling thing, with smidgens of rust and verdigris in the gruelish mix. He was sick...to death, of barbarians and all their ilk--of nomads, Neanderthals, and Nazis, of savage tribes, troglodytes, and yuppies, of anyone who would drink red wine with fish. Charles Gramlich
|

| Posted By : Dan Nelson - 3/17/2008 2:19 AM | Boy, when you resurrected Flashing Swords from oblivion you were not messing around! Looking forward to this. (-: Dan Nelson
King of Nothing and Emperor of Emptiness |


| Posted By : Jared Evers - 3/17/2008 2:45 AM | | Pulp fiction? I do have a sci-fi pulp detective short that needs just one or two more rewrites. *grins* |


| Posted By : Swashbuckler - 3/17/2008 3:03 AM | Well ... I can't really post an excerpt of my offering, "Vainglorious," as it's a rather short poem. But I guess the first two lines wouldn't hurt ...
There they met, the mighty thanes, by the boulder bathed in blood —
It's a tale of a battle, held together poetically by alliteration (sort of in the "Beowulf" vein) and rhyme. And it is my very first poetry sale ever.
More than that, I dare not say ... Steve Goble
Visit my blog, Swords Against Boredom, for news on published fiction and upcoming stories. |

| Posted By : RFLong - 3/17/2008 5:01 AM | Wow. This is exciting. Here's the opening of my story 'Elements'.
*** Elements By R.F. Long
The surface of the lake stretched out across the valley, as smooth as a polished stone. Iasc slid gratefully from the back of his foul-tempered pony and the shingle crunched beneath his feet. He cast a dark look to Gwalchmai for making him ever get up on the cursed beast. He could have asked him to slow the pace, but Iasc would see himself damned before he would ask Gwalchmai of the Setantii to give him quarter. Until recently, the Setantii were nothing but enforcers of the Roman walls, keeping the Picts out of the Gododdin. He didn't even belong on this side of the narrow sea of Eriu.
Using the strength of will Master Perchal taught him, Iasc centred himself and ignored his own feelings. "We're here."
Gwalchmai studied him a little longer than was entirely necessary. His eyes, like slivers of crystal in the sunlight, never wavered. Then he dismounted too.
Other followers of the Elemental Path counted Iasc one of the most talented. He had heard some of his brethren whispering, wondering if he could read souls like Master Perchal; or worse, if he could plunder them like the famed air elemental, Niamh, was said to do. His abilities were still growing, but he knew that they were formidable. He didn't feel much pride in his talent. It was just another factor in his makeup that marked him out as different, like being short and slight for his age, like his brown eyes in a country known for blue and grey. Gwalchmai looked like his mother lived two miles down the road, while Iasc knew he was different, had always known, from the moment he could recognise the doubts in the blue eyes of his father and what they meant.
As if sensing his companion's thoughts, Gwalchmai looked back and gave an encouraging grin. Iasc scowled at him, resenting his warrior build, his blue eyes, even the way he sat his horse. The bloody warrior did everything right, every last thing. ***
The summer special sounds amazing. I can't wait to see everything else!
R |

| Posted By : Jared Evers - 3/17/2008 5:06 AM | crystalwizard said... FS doesn't do sci-fi, remember?
Hey, just trying to do my part to help out. *grins*
On that note, here's a short bit from my story. Tomorrow, when it's not quite so late at night as it is now, I'll see if I can sneak another one in here.
**** Silent Dirge by Jared Evers
Sataurnos looked at his men for a long moment. His four men. Given the odds their lifestyle provided, they were each lucky to be alive. Yet even taking luck into consideration, he couldn't help but be surprised at how lonely the number four could seem.
"Third Infantry, First Battalion, B Company." Each of the men stiffened involuntarily at Sataurnos's words. "It's only been seven years since the war with Cambon ended. All of the friends we've lost in those seven years, yet we lost even more during the war. But we didn't lose them to soldiers of the Cambon army. Those soldiers were just defending their homeland. It was Vaelas who prolonged that damn war, and every man we watched fall to the ground did so in response to the Patron Father's orders. For the glory of Thayr."
He shook his head in disgust. "Vaelas's Thayr. Not ours. Now I know I don't want power—what sane man would? But more than that, I don't want him to have power. And we have a chance now to take it from him." |

| Posted By : Shade53 - 3/17/2008 9:34 AM | I'm incredibly thrilled to be a part of this! I am not really sure what to post as an excerpt so I will post the beginning...
Moronar's Chosen
By Sarah Wagner
Two piercing whistles split the day open as Synova called to her tekamoc. The bird swooped down to the mountain meadow, his broad gray wings casting her in shadow. “Good boy, Daekuh.” She pulled herself up onto his back and fastened the harness she wore securely to the straps around him. “Home.” With gentle ease, the large bird lifted up into the air and flew south towards Mocinol, the center of the Jaffine Nation.
Synova loved the view of her home from the sky. Even in her haste to reach the Matriarch’s Temple, it calmed her. The expanse of the crop fields, the tendrils of water sectioning the land, the great stone temple in its center, all familiar like the lines on her palm. Dense foliage to the north, mountains to the west, and the sea to the south and east protected the Jaffine Capital.
The moment Daekuh landed in the Temple gardens, Synova unhooked her harness, leapt from his back and ran for the flat-roofed stone pyramid that jutted up from the center of the village. She pulled the ties on her split-skirt as she ran, freeing the panels and returning it to a proper skirt form.
Pausing to brush a hand over the three faces carved in the entry, she rushed into the Temple. Cumnar, the Matriarch and her two closest advisors, Kalmar and Regor stood, huddled at the stone altar in the center of the temple, whispering.
“The Hartaanian Converters,” she dropped to her knees before them, “they’re coming!”
Currently Appearing
Moronar's Vessel - Golden Visions Magazine
Upcoming Publications
Pulling Threads - The Written Word, Enough - Mouth Full of Bullets, Blur of Tiers - Lorelai Signal, Tomb of Setankan - Ruins Metropolis, Trinity - Sounds of the Night, Moronar's Chosen - Flashing Swords, Purrfect Match - Cup of Comfort for Cat Lovers, Seduka - Worlds of Wonder, In the Tomb of the Ancient Goddess - Big Pulp, Soul Scrapbook - Big Pulp, For All the Years She Missed - Burst, April Scabs - Everyday Fiction
|

| Posted By : warriorchick85 - 3/17/2008 12:13 PM | Hi, my first post on here.
I'm having the poem "Dragon Fire" published in this issue. Here's the first few lines...
Before they left they brought forth one Meant to pray and bless each son Going to war, to raid, to fight To sail his ship throughout the night
She blessed the sword, the bow, the shield And prayed their victims soon would yield She cut the throat and slew the bull In bloody Viking ritual
Her craft mysterious, deep and dark Struck awe and wonder in each heart Now flaming eyes on figureheads Would light the way for miles ahead
This is, quite obviously, a poem about Vikings. The editors didn't care for the first one I submitted and asked if I could write another--which I considered a great honor. :) So this is it. |

| Posted By : Nik - 3/17/2008 12:23 PM | This looks great! 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 |


| Posted By : Chris Willrich - 3/17/2008 3:45 PM | This is fun! Here's the start of my story "The Mermaid and the Mortal Thing."
-----
It is rare to glimpse a mermaid, rarer still a whole pod building sandcastles.
The travelers on the road from Palmary to Amberhorn paused upon a sea-cliff, staring down at the peculiar sight. Lovely figures the shades of emerald and coral and turquoise splashed about a sandy hollow licked by the rising tide. They sang and gestured, and sand sculpted itself in deference to their voices, a tower for a trill, rising steps for a staccato scale, a battlement for a crescendo. Like songs in a medley, the sandcastles blended together in a riot of styles, turrets to minarets to onion domes, and what the pair of wayfarers could see filled an arc of fifty yards. More was hidden by the cliffs.
"Let's go closer," said the poet Gaunt, her eyes widening.
"Why not?" mused the thief Bone, his eyes narrowing. "I have lived too long."
Still, he made sure his daggers were handy before approaching the beach, and he stopped his ears with wax.
----- |

| Posted By : RHFay - 3/17/2008 4:42 PM |
crystalwizard said...
Illustrations by A.R. Stone, Jay Stevol, G.W. Thomas, Johnney Perkins, Brad Foster, Richard Fay and Miguel Santos
He, he, he...I guess I had better get to work on those drawings, eh?
(Dragons and giants and fairies, oh my!  )
"I'm going to do what the warriors of old did. I'm going to recite poetry!"
Richard H. Fay - Azure Lion Productions
|


| Posted By : Nik - 3/17/2008 8:07 PM | 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 |

| Posted By : Scribe - 3/17/2008 9:10 PM | 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 |

| Posted By : J.F. Keeping - 3/18/2008 12:23 AM | |
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]> |

| Posted By : Mark S. - 3/18/2008 10:09 PM | | 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. |

| Posted By : Bruce Durham - 3/19/2008 5:23 PM | 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 |


| Posted By : Nik - 3/19/2008 7:09 PM | 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 |

| Posted By : SC Bryce - 3/19/2008 7:58 PM | Lookin' forward to it! SC Bryce
www.SCBryce.com |

| Posted By : J.F. Keeping - 3/20/2008 4:11 PM | | I'm going to Ad Astra, Canada's biggest literary sf/f con next weekend and I'd like to promote the summer special, especially since I'm in it. Do you have a cover illustration or something that I could print and hand out? I'm afraid it's a little last-minute to get anything to me by snailmail.
|

| Posted By : Bruce Durham - 3/20/2008 5:00 PM | J.F. Keeping said... I'm going to Ad Astra, Canada's biggest literary sf/f con next weekend and I'd like to promote the summer special, especially since I'm in it. Do you have a cover illustration or something that I could print and hand out? I'm afraid it's a little last-minute to get anything to me by snailmail. I've sent you a PM. 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 |

| Posted By : crystalwizard - 3/20/2008 7:47 PM | J.F. Keeping said... I'm going to Ad Astra, Canada's biggest literary sf/f con next weekend and I'd like to promote the summer special, especially since I'm in it. Do you have a cover illustration or something that I could print and hand out? I'm afraid it's a little last-minute to get anything to me by snailmail.
The cover's not done yet :( The cover's only a sketch at the moment.
I can send you a file for a Return of the Sword flier, I can send you one for Flashing Swords in general flier. And you can hand out something with excerpts from your story perhaps? |

| Posted By : J.F. Keeping - 3/21/2008 10:55 PM |
crystalwizard said...
The cover's not done yet :( The cover's only a sketch at the moment.
I can send you a file for a Return of the Sword flier, I can send you one for Flashing Swords in general flier. And you can hand out something with excerpts from your story perhaps? Okay, just send me what you have. You have my email. Thanks :) |

| Posted By : J.F. Keeping - 3/21/2008 11:00 PM | | Here be a question: What is the reasoning behind the special summer issue?
|


| Posted By : von Darkmoor - 3/21/2008 11:30 PM | so we're a long, tall, cool drink in the hand, see? and anudder thing - who's you to be questionin' da boss, eh?
~~~~~~~~~~ Jason M. Waltz Managing Editor, Flashing Swords Press (site soon to come)
|


| Posted By : crystalwizard - 3/22/2008 11:47 AM | 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. |

| Posted By : von Darkmoor - 3/22/2008 2:15 PM | Really? And here I thought it was just so we could get some more Johnney Perkins art. Hmm. Goes to show what I know
~~~~~~~~~~ Jason M. Waltz Managing Editor, Flashing Swords Press (site soon to come)
|

| Posted By : crystalwizard - 3/22/2008 4:03 PM | von Darkmoor said...Really? And here I thought it was just so we could get some more Johnney Perkins art. Hmm. Goes to show what I know VIEW IMAGE
Johnney's doing the cover for our August issue, btw and some illos inside it ;) |

| Posted By : Mark S. - 4/1/2008 1:16 AM |
crystalwizard said...summer is a long, hot, dry time when people need some exciting entertainment, don't you think?
Uh Oh. Maybe I have the wrong opening line....or is it just right?
Regardless, I thank Nik for the compliment on it. |

| Posted By : Jared Evers - 4/1/2008 3:00 AM | | I'd say just right. Though hopefully our stories won't be fighting one another in the cool shade of the magazine, but working together to, say, fight a pack of lions or something instead.
I think I got lost in my own metaphor there. Oh well, it conjures exciting images. I'm running with it. |

| Posted By : J.F. Keeping - 4/1/2008 1:43 PM |
Jared Evers said... I'd say just right. Though hopefully our stories won't be fighting one another in the cool shade of the magazine, but working together to, say, fight a pack of lions or something instead. Lions are an endangered species. Can we fight orcs instead? There are always too many of them around in heroic fantasy. |

| Posted By : Mark S. - 4/1/2008 7:54 PM |
J.F. Keeping said...
Jared Evers said... I'd say just right. Though hopefully our stories won't be fighting one another in the cool shade of the magazine, but working together to, say, fight a pack of lions or something instead. Lions are an endangered species. Can we fight orcs instead? There are always too many of them around in heroic fantasy. We can compromise and fight Wargs...or whatever those things were in The Two Towers. |

| Posted By : crystalwizard - 5/4/2008 12:31 AM | I thought maybe everyone would like a look at the cover. So here it is:
cyberwizardproductions.googlepages.com/scpreview.jpg
Just a reminder:
This special issue goes on sale June 1. It will NOT be available to read on the website. You'll need to purchase a print copy (from Lulu) or a .pdf copy (from FS home page) Final word count total is 97K Poems, short stories, articles, fantastic illustrations and a complete novella. You get a free, 11x17 full color poster if you email me the Lulu receipt for your purchase.
You want this issue. It goes off sale Sept 30
There will not be any back issues, so do not procrastinate or you'll miss out. Never meddle in the affairs of a wizard unless you are soggy and hard to light!
Managing Editor of Flashing Swords
Visit my art gallery on art wanted All my books in print |

| Posted By : Jordan Lapp - 5/4/2008 12:34 AM | Amazing cover and some great names, CW! Jordan Lapp
Managing Editor
|


| Posted By : J.F. Keeping - 5/4/2008 1:23 AM | | Yes, I have to agree the cover is great. Very dynamic. You don't see many close-in shots like that in this kind of art.
|

| Posted By : Jared Evers - 5/4/2008 5:55 PM | Very nice cover. I really like the bleak background. It fits perfectly with the struggle in the foreground, and what looks to be the start of a killing blow. |

| Posted By : MysticWino - 5/19/2008 11:13 AM | I put in about 60 hours this past week doing copy edits on this . . .
Why did it take so long? Because it's SOSOSOSOSO amazingly excellent! Seriously. I'd been over much of the content before and was familiar with much of it. Despite that, I was wonderfully enchanted and enthralled with everything in there. It is such a rich tapestry of diverse stories. From pirates to gladiators to duelists . . . phenomenal story telling throughout. I feel like I spent the weekend running around the globe - from the sea to the desert and beyond. I can still taste the salt, smell the brine, and hear the echoes of fell chants, screams of swords, blasts of a couple blunderbusses, and the distinct hiss of arrows driving through to carve history into the Victors' names . . . and vice versa
It is manifestly obvious to me why this extra issue HAD to be released.
Now . . . back to my own writing for a couple days . . . humbled by never daunted, and most definitely inspired!
"The schizophrenic is drowning in the same waters in which the mystic swims with delight." --Joseph Campbell |

| Posted By : von Darkmoor - 5/19/2008 11:19 AM | Cool! Thank you David, for all your hard work on ensuring FS delivers an excellent product!
For any one who's never been there, 60 hours at anything is phenomenal dedication - at copy editing is simply stunning! A standing ovation for Mr. Pitchford is long overdue.
~~~~~~~~~~ Ever waltz with the Devil? Or devil with a Waltz?
|

| Posted By : Jared Evers - 5/19/2008 1:10 PM | I'll second that ovation! I can easily say that Mr. Pitchford's talents and insights were invaluable to me. *bows*
And I also would like to say that I'm extremely proud to be a part of this issue. From what I've read so far it not only lives up to the hype, it exceeds my expectations. |

| Posted By : crystalwizard - 5/19/2008 2:08 PM | von Darkmoor said... Cool! Thank you David, for all your hard work on ensuring FS delivers an excellent product!
For any one who's never been there, 60 hours at anything is phenomenal dedication - at copy editing is simply stunning! A standing ovation for Mr. Pitchford is long overdue.
Yep. I echo Jason's comments. I'm extremely grateful, David, for all your work and effort. I really appreciate it and count on your skills to make sure what we put in print is the best it can be. Thank you for agreeing to be part of our team. |


| Posted By : Bill Ward - 5/21/2008 6:42 PM | Good on you David, I know how tedious, yet how vital, that job is; good to know FS has someone reliable doing it. billwardwriter.com |
|