Panzerfaust #56

Issue #56 of Panzerfaust (November-December 1972) was the fourth under Don Lowry, and the last one produced in Indiana on his press, though it actually went out after the business had moved to Maine.

Contents:
Line of Communications * Editor
Anzio: Born 1969 – Died 1972 * Tom Oleson
Fall Gelb Revisited * Kevin Slimak
The Oblique Line * Thomas Nowak
In Defense of Belgium * Harold Totten
Let’s Play 1914 * Chuck Holland
Napoleonic Kalinatactic * Mike Guth
Design Analysis: Hannibal * Harold Totten
Game Review: Hannibal * Lawrence Schmidt
Wargamer’s Guide to the ACW, Part V * Don Lowry
German Historic Placement in Dunkirk * Gary Gygax
The Battles for France * Tyrone Bomba
Miniatures in Their Oldest Form, a Chess Variant * Gary Gygax
Panzerblitz Defenses, Part II * Vance von Borries
Diplomacy: The Fool’s Mate in Diplomacy * Rich Brooks
Wargaming in Miniature * Gary Gygax
Game Design: Reducing Luck in Wargames * Bill Gale
Thumbnail Analysis * Editor
Wargamer’s Notebook: The World Chess Championships * Harold Totten
Pass in Review * Editor
Reconnaissance in Force * Editor
Mail Call

Available at Wargame Vault.

Panzerfaust #55

The third issue of Panzerfaust under Don Lowry (September-October 1972) continued the new format. The editorial column had recent news, and announced an upcoming move to Maine, as the current house that was holding the magazine, Lowrys Hobbies (a mail-order catalog), and Guidon Games, was far too small for everything.

Contents:
Line of Communications * Editor
Wargamer’s Guide to the Russian Front, #1 * John Lundstrom
Waterloo: 30 Turns of Battle * Gary Gygax
Design Analysis: Phalanx & Alexander * Harold Totten
A Second Opinion: Game Review * Lawrence Schmidt
Wargamer’s Guide to the ACW, Part IV * Don Lowry
Panzerblitz & Combat Command * Paul Mills
D-Day at LeMans * Steve Powlesland
Playable U.S.N. * Mark Swanson
The Six Days War * Harold Totten
Warfare in Miniature * Gary Gygax
Diplomacy * Gary Gygax
Game Design: Realism vs Playability * Harold Totten
Wargamer’s Notebook * Lou Zocci and Jacqueline Lichtenberg
Pass in Review * Editor
Reconnaissance in Force
Mail Call

Available at Wargame Vault.

Panzerfaust #54

And now the second issue of Panzerfaust under Don Lowry is available for download. This issue features a review of AH’s France, 1940, compared with Gary Gygax’s Dunkirk, thoughts on North Africa in WWII, and designer’s notes on Spirit of ’76, a game that was originally a subscriber’s bonus with this issue (not included here), as well as articles by designer Vance von Borries, and author Jerry Pournelle.

Contents:
Line of Communications * Editor
The French Army in 1940 * Harold Totten
Design Analysis: France ’40 & Dunkirk * Harold Totten
British Openings in Origins * Vance von Borries
Spirit of ’76 * Chuck Lane
Wargamer’s Guide To the ACW, Part III * Don Lowry
Prelude to Africa Korps * R. W. Garbisch
Simulating the Desert War * J.E. Pournelle
Stalingrad Rules Interpretations * George Phillies
Game Design * Don Lowry
Operation Contact * Alister Wm. Macintyre
Diplomacy: Two Unusual German Openings * Edi Birson
Forgotten Military Vehicles * Tom Wham
Thumbnail Analysis * Editor
Wargamer’s Notebook * Editor
Book Review * Editor
Pass In Review * Editor
Reconnaissance In Force * Editor
The Great Debate * Donald Wolff
Mail Call

Also, The Fox Hole continues as  a ‘value add’ column, with observations and some commentary on just where things were in 1972.

Available at Wargame Vault.

Panzerfaust #53

After not doing much for a bit, Fox Den has launched a new project today!

Back in the ’60s my dad got into the wargaming industry with Lowrys Hobbies, which was a mail-order business for miniatures, terrain, and the like, as well as reselling games of course. He got his own printing press to produce the catalog, and then started Guidon Games to start publishing miniatures rules and board games. In 1972, he bought Panzerfaust magazine from Don Greenwood and ran that for the next decade.

I am now working on republishing all those issues (#53-#111) in PDF format. My dad doesn’t remember the terms of the sale well enough to be entirely sure of the rights to the first fifty-two issues (talk of reprinting them at the time suggests he does have the rights, but I’d want to talk to Don Greenwood first anyway)… and getting a hold of them to scan would be a major undertaking.

I hope to put one out, on average, once a month, and since my dad ran it as a (mostly) bimonthly for ten years, this is a five-year project.

Each issue will be a scanned PDF with searchable text. I’m also adding a final page with my own commentary and elaborations on when the issue came out and its contents.

So, here’s the spiel for issue #53:

In 1972 Don Greenwood was hired by Avalon Hill as editor for their magazine, the General. The magazine that had brought him to their attention was sold to Don Lowry, who took over as of issue #53.

This is a searchable scanned PDF of the original issue (without the game insert) from May/June 1972. (Note that there are a couple of pages where the text gets cut off a little, this was in the original printing.)

Panzerfaust was an amateur ‘zine, but was growing up into the semi-pro leagues at this point, having graduated from mimeographs to actual offset printing.

Contents:
Line of Communications: Editorial
Wargamer of the Month: Don Greenwood
Western PanzerBlitz Revisited * Paul Mills
Assorted Comments On Western PanzerBlitz * Roy Easton
More Western PanzerBlitz * Roy Easton
Forgotten Military Vehicles * Tom Wham
Fuhrer Directive 33 * E. Gary Gygax
Wargamer’s Guide To the ACW, Part II * Don Lowry
The Battle of New Orleans * Larry Schmidt
Midway Island * R. W. Garbisch [rules]
The Ship With Guts * Damian Housman
The Super Battleship * Kevin Muyzinski
Fall Barbarossa Review * George Phillies
Blue and Gray * E. Gary Gygax
The Great Debate * Lou Zocchi, Gary Gygax, and Tom Clarke
Diplomacy: Russia’s Northern Offensive * Rod Walker
Warfare In Miniature: The Battle Report of the USS Franklin * David L. Arneson
Blunderovsky Blows the Battle of Moscow * Mark Swanson
Design Analysis: Nuclear Destruction * Harold Totten
Thumbnail Analysis
Pass In Review * Donald Greenwood
Reconnaissance In Force
Mail Call

Also, as a ‘value add’, there is an extra page with observations and some commentary on just where things were in 1972.

Available at Wargame Vault.

To Kill a Dragon

Christina “Smudge” Hanson’s latest graphic novel!

ToKillADragon-GN-CoverHow does one assassinate the unkillable?

After a devastating attack by the assassin Veniamin on the King’s airship, a lone survivor wakes up confused and mute after falling into Nadine’s apple orchard. With the entire kingdom in an uproar, only this strange, quiet man holds any knowledge of what happened that day and where the Great Dragon 7th, the assassin’s real target, has disappeared to. Now both friend and foe want him, and the race is on to see who can find him first.

This is a 70-page full color graphic novel of the comic seen on ComiXology and SM-EW (and a few other places).

Print (6″x9″ softcover):

ebook

The Keeper’s Warrior

Fox Den’s inaugural book is now available!

TheKeepersWarrior-coverThe Long Road is long indeed.

But even the most traveled of rolling stones needs a respite. And that’s exactly what Warrior, a half-Elf sell-sword, finds when he stumbles into the seaside village of Echo Cove. It is there that he gains a renewed faith in his Goddess Euseeda, a quiet, deep-trusting friendship with the shrine’s Keeper, and a chance to rectify the worst, most devastating blunder that he has ever committed.

Christina “Smudge” Hanson’s latest book is a switch for those used to her graphic novels and comic short stories, but is illustrated, interior and exterior by her.

This is actually a collection of three short stories that combine to form one novella, and began life as her NaNoWriMo project last year.

Print (6″x9″ softcover):

ebook:

Welcome!

Welcome to a brand-new publishing enterprise! Things are still a little disorganized here, but let me fill you in on the general picture:

Fox Den is a tiny-press publisher. Which is to say, it’s not even a small press. It is an actual business, but unless a miracle occurs, it is also a hobby; I’m not expecting to see any real amount of profit from this. But it is a publisher; it’s goal is not to serve as one man’s vanity press, but to publish a small number of different projects that I like through the magic of electronic publishing and print-on-demand services.

The idea for this company has gone through a number of iterations. The first was as a publisher of role-playing supplements; this could still happen if I can get myself writing.

The second was a electronic publisher of older public domain books (notably histories). There’s a number of publishers out there doing an absolutely horrible job of it right now, and surpassing their lack of editorial control is a low bar.

Right now, that last idea is on hold for a similar project: Fox Den will be re-publishing, with permission of the author, a four book series on the last year of the American Civil War by Donald S. Lowry, who is currently self-publishing a related series on the 1863 campaigns.

And Fox Den is currently getting ready to publish its first fantasy book, The Warrior’s Keeper, by Christina “Smudge” Hanson, the creator of Ebin & May and The Bureau of Mana Investigation. I expect to publish further prose stories from her in the future.