For those who might be interested, short stories by Evangeline Walton have been published.
http://www.nodensbooks.com/
Walton is another author whom I read back in the Seventies and have hardly looked into since then. I don't know how well I would like her work now. I did start a rereading of
The Island of the Mighty not too long ago, but somehow did not stick with it for more than a few pages. She seems to be one of those fantasy authors who was mentioned often circa 1975, but not any more. I imagine that many Chronsfolk have never read her.
The book that has dropped out of discussion most surprisingly might be White's
Once and Future King. Nobody ever seems to mention it any more, but back in the early Seventies or so, that was one of the books one almost inevitably turned to when one had read Tolkien, Lewis, and perhaps a few others. Much of White was returned to print: you could go to a mall bookstore in Klamath Falls, Oregon, and find a reprint of a White book about fishing in Ireland or something. I'm not necessarily lamenting this state of affairs; I have kept my copy of TO&FK, but haven't even felt attracted to rereading it for many years. I think if I were to read White's Arthurian books again, this time I would read the versions before he edited them for publication in one volume. The original edition of
The Sword in the Stone should be easy to find because it was a tie-in to a Disney cartoon:
The sequels were published as:
The conclusion,
The Candle in the Wind, was published for the first time in the single volume version: