
Return of the Sword is a brand new anthology of blood-pounding, spine-tingling stories by some of fantasy's most critically acclaimed Sword and Sorcery authors.
Stacey Berg, Bill Ward, Phil Emery, Jeff Draper, Nicholas Ian Hawkins, David Pitchford, Ty Johnston, Jeff Stewart, Angeline Hawkes, Robert Rhodes, E.E. Knight, James Enge, Michael Ehart, Thomas M. MacKay, Christopher Heath, Nathan Meyer, S.C. Bryce, Allen B. Lloyd, William Clunie, Steve Goble, Bruce Durham, and Harold Lamb present you with enough fast paced adventure to keep you reading for hours.
A hand painted, wrap around cover by fantasy artist Johnney Perkins ensures that Return of the Sword will not only be enjoyable to read, but also look good on your coffee table or bookshelf.
Too long have the halls of fantasy been dominated by packs of weak-kneed elves hunting goblins and doughty dwarves mining for gold. Return now to the days of true adventure. Unsheath your sword and enter if you dare!
For purchase info click here: Return of the Sword
Excerpt from one of the stories in Return of the Sword
From “LAIR OF THE CHERUFE: A Tale of the Barbarian Kabar of El Hazzar” – by Angeline Hawkes (452 words):
Kabar stared. Before them, salivating over his brother’s face, was a legendary Manticore. The massively muscled lion’s body crowned with the face of a man held its scaled tail and its ball of poisonous quills arched high. One launch of those darts and the Manticore could kill them all. Three rows of razor sharp teeth teasingly clenched Aeneas, toying with him like a cat does a mouse. Traken and Kabar froze.
The Manticore growled. Aeneas lay as still as he could, terror blanketing his face. Kabar’s mind raced. This was the temple guardian. Were there more? His eyes quickly moved around the edge of the clearing, finding nothing. He studied the Manticore in front of them, saw its patchy fur, yellowed teeth – age betrayed it.
Kabar turned his head slightly so he could see Traken’s face. With his eyes he indicated Traken should move toward the left side of the clearing. Traken nodded and, carefully lifting one foot from the tangled path, began moving toward the goal.
The Manticore watched Traken moving, and another growl rolled from its throat. Kabar remained frozen in place. The Manticore’s eyes shifted from Kabar to the slow moving Traken, and the beast gave Aeneas a slight shake. Aeneas whimpered and reached up with his hands to grab the beast’s head. The human face looked down and seemed to smile at Aeneas.
Kabar eyed the Manticore’s tail. He could tell the beast wasn’t sure at which man to aim its poisonous barbs. The creature was sizing up the two men, determining the larger threat. Kabar tried to catch his brother’s attention, but Aeneas was moving around too much and Kabar couldn’t make eye contact with him.
The Manticore dropped Aeneas, snapped its tail backward and loosed its barbs toward Traken. Traken dove to the ground, narrowly escaping the volley. Aeneas took the opportunity to roll to his feet, but the Manticore roared in frustration, and sunk its teeth into Aeneas’ upper arm. Aeneas shouted in pain.
Kabar reacted to his brother’s cry and leapt through the air, prepared to plunge his sword into the growling beast shaking Aeneas back and forth. He landed backward astride the beast’s body. Quickly twisting around, he clamped his powerful thighs tight to the Manticore’s sides. Down he plunged his sword, again and again, impaling the beast on the steel. The Manticore let Aeneas fly with a toss of its head and wildly thrashed, trying to free itself of the warrior on its back. Roaring in anguish the beast ran toward the temple, crashing against the wall in an attempt to knock Kabar loose. Kabar plunged the sword into the tough hide of the beast and clenched the steel in his fist.
For purchase info click here: Return of the Sword