
David A. Riley
Author of His Own Mad Demons: Dark Tales from David A. Riley
About the Author
Series
Works by David A. Riley
After Nightfall 3 copies
Welgar the Cursed 2 copies
Out of Corruption 1 copy
Writer's Cramp 1 copy
A New Lease 1 copy
Beyond 1 1 copy
Inside The Labyrinth 1 copy
Associated Works
Dark Discoveries Issue Number 15, Fall 2009 — Contributor — 1 copy
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Gender
- male
Members
Reviews
Lately, I’ve been in the mood for some good old-fashioned sword and sorcery, and this anthology caught my eye. Unlike some anthologies I’ve recently read, each of the 10 pieces in this volume feels complete, rather than an outtake of a larger story.
The collection was decently edited, and I only noticed a couple of typos. Of course the writing style varied. My own preference is for spare prose, so I tended to prefer the shorter or faster-paced pieces such as “A Thousand Words for show more Death.” For my tastes, the more descriptive ones such as “The Essence of Dust” and “The Amulet and the Shadow” felt a touch overwritten.
I liked seeing the variety of challenges that faced our sometimes-but-not-always heroes. Most of them were of the supernatural or magical variety, including various eldritch oddities as well as gods, spirits, demons and so on.
My favourite work was Tais Teng’s “Highjacking the Lord of Light”, where the main character had some personal as well as adventure challenges to deal with. Other than that, it was a nice break from heavier works to go off on adventures without feeling the need to invest too much in the characters or their worlds. show less
The collection was decently edited, and I only noticed a couple of typos. Of course the writing style varied. My own preference is for spare prose, so I tended to prefer the shorter or faster-paced pieces such as “A Thousand Words for show more Death.” For my tastes, the more descriptive ones such as “The Essence of Dust” and “The Amulet and the Shadow” felt a touch overwritten.
I liked seeing the variety of challenges that faced our sometimes-but-not-always heroes. Most of them were of the supernatural or magical variety, including various eldritch oddities as well as gods, spirits, demons and so on.
My favourite work was Tais Teng’s “Highjacking the Lord of Light”, where the main character had some personal as well as adventure challenges to deal with. Other than that, it was a nice break from heavier works to go off on adventures without feeling the need to invest too much in the characters or their worlds. show less
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Associated Authors
Statistics
- Works
- 32
- Also by
- 20
- Members
- 61
- Popularity
- #274,233
- Rating
- 3.7
- Reviews
- 1
- ISBNs
- 17
