Sword & Sorcery: "An earthier sort of fantasy" discussion
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I think it was an editor, Lou Anders or Andrew J Offut who referred to "Iliad" as heroic fantasy and "Odyssey" as Sword & Sorcery. It's interesting to think of Shakespeare in the heroic fantasy tradition. Especially, his "Tempest".


If your protagonist and antagonist are individuals that face each other using whatever means are available at hand, be it a sword or a rapidly uttered incantation, without complex rules of engagement, and the results of their conflict will result in the blood of the defeated spilled at the feet of the victor, then you're in that gritty and direct kind of story we seek.
That kind of immediate conflict is what attracts me to the earthier sort of fantasy. Remove the layers of abstraction and give me an axe cleaved through the skull of my enemy; save your political manipulations and scheming for another day and another reader.
Steven wrote: "I don't know much about Homer (Doh!) or Shakespeare, but reflecting on the concept of "...and earthier sort of fantasy" makes me think it can be determined by the amount of abstraction between enem..."
Swords-n-Simpsons .... now that is groupread topic.
Swords-n-Simpsons .... now that is groupread topic.

When you got a Sword & Sorcery hero rescuing someone, it's almost never selfless. They do it because they like the person or because they like the person who asked them to do it. Or they get paid. But don't appeal to their sense of Duty. They have none.

Defining Sword-and-Sorcery
By Howard Andrew Jones
...being a really interesting view, from a modern master of the genre, from the "Tales From the Magician's Skull " kickstarter, updates.
By Howard Andrew Jones
...being a really interesting view, from a modern master of the genre, from the "Tales From the Magician's Skull " kickstarter, updates.
"One man who never confused the two terms was the famous writer Fritz Leiber. Best known today as one of the “Grand Masters” of science fiction, he is also beloved for his creation of Fafhrd and the Grey Mouser, a pair of swashbuckling fantasy adventurers. Although the numerous stories of Fafhrd and the Grey Mouser are undoubtedly heroic fantasy, Leiber once wrote “It strikes me (and something might be made of this) that Fafhrd and the Grey Mouser are at the opposite extreme from the heroes of Tolkien. My stuff is at least as equally fantastic as his, but it is an earthier sort of fantasy. . .”*. It is impossible to say that he was specifically thinking of the term heroic fantasy when he wrote this, but it is clear that he was discontent with his fantasy stories being placed in the same category as The Lord of the Rings. Because of this, in 1961, Fritz Leiber coined the term “Sword and Sorcery” to refer to his own type of fantasy. Thus, because the term was created specifically for the stories of Fafhrd and the Grey Mouser, these tales belong unquestionably to the genre."
*Fritz Leiber, The Swords of Lankhmar, (London, Grafton Books, 1987)