Robert E. Howard died in 1936 after a blistering decade of writing for the pulps. He created characters in all sorts of genres such as Steve Costigan for his boxing tales, Breckenridge Elkins for his frontier adventures, Solomon Kane for weird tales of the supernatural, and Conan the Barbarian for stories of sword and sorcery, a genre Howard largely invented. There were many, many others, but with his death no new stories were forthcoming to keep his fans satisfied, so they chose to satisfy themselves.
The Conan Swordbook from 1969 is a thicker volume coming in at over two hundred and fifty pages, and this book takes advantage of the wide range of articles and art and wide array of authors. The volume is divided into sections such as "Robert E. Howard and his Fiction", "His Colleagues", and "The Complete Sword and Sorcery Hero". Among the writers in this volume are Fritz Lieber, Poul Anderson, and L. Sprague De Camp among many others. There are letters from REH, as well as articles which explore The Hyborean Age. Gregg Barr created the very handsome cover. I have volume #16.
The Conan Gimoire is structured much like its predecessor and sports some lovely artwork by Berni Wrightson on the slipcover. This two-hundred-and-sixty page volume features writers such as E. Hoffman Price, Fritz Lieber, Jerry Pournelle, and Poul Anderson among many others. REH is represented by new letters. This volume edited by De Camp and George H. Scithers was published in 1972. The books in this last run seem not to have been numbered.
At the end of the 1970's another fantasy boom was peeking and to service that renewed interest in heroes like Conan and all things Robert E. Howard. Much of the material from the three volumes above was reprinted in two paperbacks from ACE. The first was titled The Blade of Conan and the second The Spell of Conan. The latter features several new pieces as well as heady reprints.
I've owned the paperbacks since they were first published. The original hardbacks came into my possession around a decade ago. I was able to buy The Conan Reader, the first volume of the trio. (It just so happens it has been autographed by L. Sprague De Camp also.) Alas, a friend of mine had already picked up the other two volumes. I was a bit strapped for cash back then, and when I expressed interest in them, he graciously gave them to me. His generosity makes me treasure them all the more.
To read more about these volumes check out this link to The Barbarian Keep.
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I have the final two collections. Love them.
ReplyDeleteNice volumes and neat insights into a time before the internet transformed the way we communicated.
DeleteNow that you've reminded your friend who he gave those two volumes to, let's hope he doesn't decide he'd like them back, eh?
ReplyDeleteHe gifted them to me at the time, so I'm safe on that account.
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