Welcome, Darrin!
Are you an ARMA member? Or are you interested in becoming one? Everything you really need to know about ARMA is of course found on the home page. If you havenb't looked there yet, I'd start with Method, FAQ, Practice, and National Training Program, and go from there.
There are also all kinds of books out there, most of which can be found in Research and Reading, and New Book Reviews.
It also kind of depends on what weapon(s) you're interested in.
If it's rapier (for thrusting fence) I'm afraid I can't help you much except to recommend John Clements' book "Rennaisance Swordsmanship" as an excellent starting place, and there are also several essays found in the Articles and Essays section. I've read these (as well as the following books I've listed), so these are the only ones I can personally recommend. Beyond this, you're at someone else's mercy.
If it' longsword, there's also John's "Medieval Swordsmanship," as well as David Lindholm's "Sigmund Ringeck's Knightly Art of the Longsword," and a wonderful translation of Joachim Meyer at
www.schielhau.org . Meyer is also a great place to start, because not only is he a period source, but he really starts you at and takes you through the basics.
Beyond that, get a sword (or preferably a waster if you're a beginner <img src="/forum/images/icons/wink.gif" alt="" /> ) and get outside and start swinging. Begin with the basic guards (stances), strikes and thrusts, and footwork. Everything else builds from those, so be sure you learn and practice them well.
Oh yeah! Get to a seminar asap, too!
Hope this is helpful.
David Kite
ARMA in IN