Rejoice, Mortals, for Tales from the Magician’s Skull #3 is Here!

Rejoice, Mortals, for Tales from the Magician’s Skull #3 is Here!

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“Rejoice, mortals! I have heard your pleas and returned to grant your greatest desire: More sword-and-sorcery!

Once again I will bring you tales of thrilling adventures in time-lost lands. There are swords, and there is sorcery. There are dark deeds and daring rescues…” —The Magician’s Skull 

Should You Trust a Talking Skull?

Well, no sane person would, but I attest this particular skull does not lie. Tales from the Magician’s Skull (installments #1 and #2) spawned from a successful 2017 Kickstarter campaign in which Howard Andrew Jones (Sword & Sorcery guru, author, and RPGer) teamed up with Joseph Goodman (of Goodman Games, publisher of Dungeon Crawl Classics). The resulting magazine reflects this partnership, marrying great stories with corresponding RPG elements. Interested in the origins of the magazine? Then check out John O’Neill’s Black Gate coverage of the initial run: In Search of a new Weird Tales: An Interview with Joseph Goodman, Howard Andrew Jones, and the Talking Skull!

This July 2019, the Skull resurfaced with issue #3 and promises of issues #4-6. As a backer and enthusiast of fantasy fiction, I couldn’t be more pleased. If you missed the Kickstarters, have no worries you “mortal dogs” (another Skull saying), since both Goodman Games and Amazon offer them. Future plans are as follows: “Issue #4 will release in March 2020, and others will follow bi-annually thereafter. Upon reaching issue #666, the Skull will travel to a higher plane and the magazine will end.”

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All three issues. Covers by Jim Pavelec, Diesel LaForce, and Sanjulian

Quality Material, Stories, & Illustrations:

The print quality is great again (the artwork, editing, illustrations, tan-cardstock pulp-feel … the magazine is just fun to hold). The last item in the Table of Contents (below) should be the first to discuss since it is iconic: The Appendix. What a great design idea! To drive home the RPG elements of the stories, Terry Olson once again created items and Dungeon Crawl Classic RPG rules related to each story. This is really cool. Read the stories…then go re-live/play them. I enjoy reading this section each time just to re-imagine the stories.

The six featured Sword & Sorcery stories are all enjoyable, and there is plenty of bonus content like flash fiction, author and illustrator notes, and the appendix of RPG-items. Most stories have some mystery or police-procedural flare; several are serials from the previous Tales from the Magician’s Skull installments; others have characters appearing in other venues. For me, since I am a huge fan of Clark Ashton Smith and poetic/weird adventure (Dunsany), the last story by Sarah Newton was a true highlight.

The cover is by master artist Sanjulián (Manuel Pérez Clemente). Many full-page, detailed illustrations decorate the interior by established artists: Samuel Dillon, Justine Jones, Doug Kovacs, Brad McDevitt, Russ Nicholson (an old-time favorite from Fighting Fantasy), Stefan Poag, Matthew Ray, and Chuck Whelan. There is a short essay in which Samuel Dillon explains how he created one the frontispiece for “The Second Death of Hanuvar.”

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Illustration by Samuel Dillon

 

Table of Contents:

 

(1) “Face That Fits His Mask” by William King

King’s Kormac is available in a series of collections (starts with Stealer of Flesh). Kormac is a hunter of dark creatures with some supernatural abilities of his own. With the aid of a suspicious demon, he goes after a kidnapper to rescue children from an underworld full of rat-men. Even though this is not formerly Warhammer, William King has written for the Black Library and the rat-kin in this story resembles the Skaven.

(2) “Tyrant’s Bane” by John C. Hocking

This time our King’s Blade (i.e., the king’s right-hand man) is sent to find a missing colleague named Viriban — well, sent after his missing corpse. The shady King Flavious wants to know what is going on in the mortuary. Benhus sets out to solve a weird necromantic tale, armed with his Nobleman’s Comfort wand of freezing and his master’s sword. Yes, this is the third tale of Benhus in as many Tale’s magazines. It is really rewarding to see Benhus evolve. From Tales #1: “The Crystal Sickle’s Harvest. From the World of the Archivist” thieves were breaking into royal crypts, but not necessarily to steal. Why? The police-like duo of Thratos (mentor Hand of the King sorcerer) and Benhus (young mentee, warrior sorcerer) investigate. And from Tales #2, “Trial by Scarab” showcased the rapid rise of Benhus from being a dexterous student of the military arts… into something better.

(3) “Five Deaths” By James Enge

I recall reading my first Morlock tale in Rogue Blade Entertainment’s Return of the Sword: An Anthology of Heroic Adventure: “Red Worm’s Way.” “Five Deaths” reads as two cops tracking a thief/criminal. Morlock is a thain (servant) to the older Lernaion (a summoner). Both are dwarf-like, with Morlock being a better caver and Lernaion able to sense the demon’s trail. The pair chases the murdering, inhuman suspect in a tale that is more Sorcery than Sword. Morlock’s strange optimism balances the seriousness of the adventure well. I laughed out loud when Morlock surmised:

“The sorcerer died for a flippancy?”

Morlock’s exploits are in the book Blood of Ambrose, and the first two Tales from the Magician’s Skull. From Tales #1 “The Guild of Silent Men: A Story of Morlock Ambrosius”, a fantasy-murder mystery fleshed out Thain Morlock’s background and motivations. And from Tales #2 “Stolen Witness” the sorcerer investigator overcame his father’s legacy in a compelling (pun intended) mystery regarding a stone–a device of sorts that reminded me of Robert E Howard’s “The Black Stone” (1931).

(4) “The Forger’s Art” by Violette Malan

A mystery adventure regarding forged art and theft. Dhulyn (finally, a lead female protagonist) and Parno are Mercenary Brothers for hire, but in this case, they are also out to avenge a fellow Brother’s death. They also appeared in Tales #2: “A Soul’s Second Skin” in which the duo with telepathic skills unraveled a mystery, and accidentally caged themselves in another plane with antagonist magicians.

(5) “Second Death of Hanuvar” by Howard Andrew Jones

Twice as long as any other story herein, this one stands out. Hanuvar (a fictionalized anti-Roman general… could this be an incarnation of Hannibal Barca?) tangles with the Roman-like Dervani who have invaded his homeland. Expect espionage thriller sorties, gladiator battles, and a sorcery-saturated climax that balances all the sword fights prior. Hanuvar appears in Tales #1: “Crypt of Stars, From the Chronicles of Hanuvar Cabera.”

(6) “The Wizard of Remembrance” by Sarah Newton

Wow, there are few who can roll out a tale as smoothly as Dunsany or Clark Ashton Smith, but Sarah Newton delivers this literary dose with excellence. I admit this was my first experience with her writing and couldn’t be happier to discover someone “new” (to me). That’s the fun of anthologies and magazines: enjoy the stories and find new authors to track down. Here is an excerpt of her voice:

“So Suven would summon the memnovores, as was his duty, and close his doors and stop his ears to the screams as the demons devoured the thoughts of his women in return for terrible gifts. Later, when the sight of their placid faces, cleansed of all care, became too much to bear, he would bow his own head and submit himself, too, to the ministrations of the memory eaters.

The Empire of Ubliax waxed mighty on the strength of its forgetting, and the savage lands of the Men of Mogor grew smaller each year. No one in the Empire knew how long its glory had endured…”

“By That Much”, “Dead Wood”, “The Return”, and “Duel’s End” by Joseph A. McCullough

These flash fiction pieces are sprinkled throughout. All feature the grave digger Nick Bury. Full of whimsy and irony, they are a nice change of pace complementing the longer contributions.

The Appendix by Terry Olson

This is the aforementioned collection of spells, creatures, and magic items for RPG play derived from the stories. It brings each story to life and unifies the set.

 

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S.E. Lindberg resides near Cincinnati, Ohio working as a microscopist by day. Two decades of practicing chemistry, combined with a passion for the Sword & Sorcery genre, spurs him to write adventure fictionalizing the alchemical humors (under the banner “Dyscrasia Fiction”). With Perseid Press, he writes weird tales in the same vein (Heroika and Heroes in Hell series). He co-moderates the Sword & Sorcery group on Goodreads, and invites all to participate. He enjoys studying Aikido and creates all sorts of fine art in the family workshop. Touch base via Facebook or Twitter.

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Martin Christopher

Always great to see heroic fantasy return to Black Gate.

James McGlothlin

I have one complaint about Magician’s Skull: Their fundraising site is completely confusing. I *think* supported this one (I know I supported the first two issues–and received them), but I have yet to see the hard copy of the third issue.

Glenn

James, did you back it on kickstarter?

They sent out updates along the way. They sent out backer copies back in October.

John ONeill

James — sounds like your issue might have gone missing. I got mine at Gen Con in August.

James McGlothlin

Glenn,

I did back the kickstarter. But I’ve searched that website high and low and haven’t found a way to contact the project to let them know I’ve been forgotten.

James McGlothlin

Thanks SELindberg. I probably screwed something up, or am just misremembering whether I actually backed this project. I *know* I backed the first two issues, and received them. That’s one of the problems, in my opinion, with these funded projects. They take so long to fulfill I sometimes forget whether I backed them or not. I’ll reach to Goodman Games and see if I or they made the mistake.


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