Sword and Sorcery Books
64Christopher Paolinia - a modern descendant:
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Eldest (Inheritance)
Price: $4.58
List Price: $7.99 |
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Brisingr Deluxe Edition (Inheritance)
Price: $17.49
List Price: $29.99 |
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Eragon's Guide to Alagaesia
Price: $12.65
List Price: $24.99 |
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Eragon and Eldest 2 copy mass market boxed set (Inheritance)
Price: $10.28
List Price: $15.98 |
Tolkien: the father of all Sword and Sorcery:
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The Legend of Sigurd and Gudrun
Price: $6.44
List Price: $26.00 |
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The Lord of the Rings
Price: $16.00
List Price: $30.00 |
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The Hobbit: 70th Anniversary Edition
Price: $14.94
List Price: $25.00 |
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Tolkien Calendar 2010
Price: $49.99
List Price: $14.95 |
Why Sword and Sorcery?
 I have always enjoyed reading books which create a complete world of their own. Titles which evoke images in the mind and sucessfully promote a "suspension of disbelief" in the mind of the reader. Characterisation is also important, and if a hero or heroine appeals one wants to spend more time in their world adventuring with them, thus the importance of decent length series.
Now I am going to hand over to someone who can explain the fascination of series fantasy very well.
© Cecelia
Sword and Sorcery Books
By Cliff
Reading. For centuries only the richest and most educated of people had the privilege to sit down and immerse themselves with the imagination between the covers of a book. Books are the direct source of the best modern day movies and games. Take Lord of the Rings for instance; that story has been made into three big movies and many great games like World of Warcraft which are all based on the ideas of J.R.R. Tolkien. However many believe that reading is lame and boring and it is fast becoming something that nobody does. I still enjoy reading and I acknowledge the achievements of a book, its creativity, and sometimes its superiority to all other media.
People crave mysteries, plots with twists, heroic deeds and action. Nowadays people watch movies for those things but as the years go by they all become similar. The mysteries are transparent, the plots are repeated, the twists are predictable and there is never enough good action. It is sad to say that they all overlook the fantastic sword and sorcery books in their bookshelves. They have all that is in a good movie and more. Indeed the story can last for months before you have finished it. Everything written is worked on to be as detailed and accurate as possible and one story is never the same as the next. The most important thing of all a good book contains something you can almost never get elsewhere. When you read the story you will feel emotions of all sorts, from satisfaction to frustration, from boredom to excitement, and most importantly, happiness to sorrow. I believe it is the emotions people don’t feel from day to day life that people crave from games and movies.
The sword and sorcery genre is most commonly known as fantasy. It is always full of monsters, warring countries, gods and magic, all set in a world created by the author. Each author has their individual opinion on how magic should work and how the everyday person is affected by it. Whether they all fear it and burn any who possess it or do they all have some natural skill? Is the strength weak or colossal? And every other question you may ask. One thing never changes; there is always a huge war in the end. Not just a big battle, but a full war that can have almost too much fighting and action. The strategies take on a large role too, during battle and the whole entire campaign. Some even point out that feeding two hundred million soldiers can be a little difficult, especially in the enemies’ territory.
Something else that they all have in common is the era which they are based upon. This is a post Roman time in Europe which is pretty perfect for writing a story on. Any earlier and the general populace would be barbarians, any later and guns begin to spoil the action and the tradition of chivalry. The people are superstitious and generally uneducated peasants. Magic was still believed to exist. There were many different cultures and religions which caused a great deal of racism and war. The world was a flat and unexplored place with mysteries everywhere; monsters lurking and destroying, cursed places and tombs with magical artefacts.
Finally in my opinion the fantasy genre, or sword and sorcery as I like to call it is the best genre there is and when somebody is bored or has some free time they should go back to their bookcase and see what they can find. I guarantee that it would be worth it.
© Cliff
The Malloreon by David Eddings
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The Malloreon, Vol. 1 (Books 1-3): Guardians of the West, King of the Murgos, Demon Lord of Karanda
Price: $11.28
List Price: $18.95 |
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The Malloreon, Vol. 2 (Books 4 & 5): Sorceress of Darshiva, The Seeress of Kell
Price: $10.11
List Price: $17.95 |
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Demon Lord of Karanda (The Malloreon, Book 3)
Price: $0.98
List Price: $7.99 |
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Guardians of the West (The Malloreon, Book 1)
Price: $2.24
List Price: $7.99 |
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King of the Murgos (The Malloreon, Book 2)
Price: $2.35
List Price: $7.99 |
The Belgariad by David Eddings
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The Belgariad, Vol. 2 (Books 4 & 5): Castle of Wizardry, Enchanters' End Game
Price: $9.45
List Price: $18.00 |
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The Belgariad, Vol. 1 (Books 1-3): Pawn of Prophecy, Queen of Sorcery, Magician's Gambit
Price: $10.70
List Price: $17.95 |
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Magician's Gambit (The Belgariad, Book 3)
Price: $3.44
List Price: $7.99 |
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Castle of Wizardry (The Belgariad, Book 4)
Price: $2.09
List Price: $7.99 |
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Enchanters' End Game (The Belgariad, Book 5)
Price: $3.49
List Price: $7.99 |
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Pawn of Prophecy (Belgariad)
Price: $3.83
List Price: $6.99 |
Sword and Sorcery Books in the News
- Truer crimeGuardian Unlimited23 hours ago
The debut crime novelist offers some alternatives to the fanciful solutions and foggy London of Sherlock Holmes James McCreet is the author of The Incendiary's Trail, a Victorian detective thriller influenced by the early works of Edgar Allan Poe and drawing on detailed historical research. Our review described it as " splendid… full of vividly depicted squalor and grotesquery ". McCreet was ...
- Franklin Township 14-year-old’s essay featured in ‘Best Teen Writing’ national publicationThe Warren Reporter23 hours ago
"The Best Teen Writing of 2009" features a short story by Franklin Township's Thornton Blease. Story Written By Sheila Abrams FRANKLIN TWP. — Thornton Blease is not an average teenager. Unlike many in his age group, he rejects conformity and...
- Sixth time lucky for Irish author Colm ToibinThe Australian2 days ago
THE Irish writer and frequent literary awards contender Colm Toibin has finally landed one of the leading British book prizes with his sixth novel.
Did you know?
Margaret Weis and Traci Hickman
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Dragonlance Chronicles Trilogy Gift Set
Price: $14.73
List Price: $23.99 |
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The Soulforge (Dragonlance: The Raistlin Chronicles, Book 1)
Price: $4.40
List Price: $7.99 |
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The War of Souls Trilogy Gift Set: Dragons of a Fallen Sun, Dragons of a Lost Star, Dragons of a Vanished Moon (Dragonlance Series)
Price: $14.73
List Price: $23.99 |
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Test of the Twins (Dragonlance Legends, Vol. 3)
Price: $3.85
List Price: $7.99 |
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Comments
Thank you Frieda. I think you are partly talking to guest writer Cliff. Those are some of his faviourite books.











Frieda Babbley says:
4 months ago
Excellent information here, Cecelia. My eldest is reading the Eragon Series now. Loves it! The awesome thing about these sword and sorcery books is that despite thier length, they get eaten up with pleasure. A wonderful thing! And with such great writers as you've presented, with such wonderful series, it's no wonder.