In his short life, Robert E. Howard saw dozens of his stories purchased and published. Howard wrote tales for almost every kind of pulp publication of the late 1920s and 1930s: boxing, cowboy yarns, heroic historic fiction, horror stories. At the height of the Great Depression, Howard’s neighbors thought him a lazy boy with no visible means of employment, but his stories were pulling in more money than almost anyone else in his small Texas hometown. Yet, at the age of 30, Howard’s writing and his life came to an end. In 1936, receiving word that his ailing mother would not survive the night, Robert E. Howard took his own life. His mother died a few hours later. Thus came the end of the man who created characters like Conan and King Kull.
Howard is credited with the creation of the sword-and-sorcery genre of fantasy. His other on-going characters included the Puritan adventurer Solomon Kane, the Pictish warrior Bran Mak Morn, the Lawrence of Arabia-inspired El Borak. These are the characters which have kept Howard’s name in publication more than 100 years after his birth, and more than 70 years after his death at the age of 30. Over the past few years, Howard’s Conan, Kane, Kull and Bran Mak Morn stories have been collected in their respective volumes by the Del Rey imprint of Ballantine Books; each volume containing numerous illustrations by various artists. Now with two volumes titled “The Best of Robert E. Howard,” Del Rey offers a sampler of Howard treats. Both include stories from past volumes.
This second volume, “Grim Lands,” contains two Conan tales (arguably the best ones: “The Tower of the Elephant” and “Red Nails”), a Kull tale, a Solomon Kane story, and one of Bran Mak Morn. “The Best of Robert E. Howard: Volume 1 Crimson Shadows” also contains tales of these characters already collected in past volumes from this series. But what makes these volumes a true find for Howard regulars are the other stories contained here. And, if you can choose only one volume, “Grim Lands” is the pick. Not only does it contain some of the best character tales (such as, again, Conan’s “Red Nails”), but it also contains other great Howard stories from his Westerns, his boxing stories, his poetry, and his horror stories. “Pigeons from Hell” is a jarring horror yarn that could give a Stephen King fan a start.
“Black Vulmea’s Vengeance” is great pirate yarn. Desert adventurer El Borak is here in “Son of the White Wolf.” Dozens of stories can be found within the volume’s 500 pages. These stories are unadulterated Robert E. Howard, some being published in their original context for the first time in decades, which means they contain the prejudices of the era as well as Howard’s oft-times creative approaches to word usage. If you’ve never read any Howard, Conan or otherwise, “Grim Lands” should be a solid indicator if you want more. For Howard fans, “Grim Lands” should be a happy place to visit.
Books
Books: The Best of Robert E. Howard: Volume 2 Grim Lands
- Books
-
-
Author uses experience to create a Christian thriller
A traumatic experience inspired Maria S. Sakry to pen her first novel, “The Darkest Night.”
-
Winston Churchill/John Keegan
This short volume on the life and times of Winston Churchill is insightful. Historian John Keegan opens the book with personal observations concerning the then-youthful post-World War II generations ambivalent attitude toward the blustery prime minister who led Britain through the conflict and the discovery that he is held in greater esteem in the United States than in England.
-
Book Review: Duma Key by Stephen King
It is tempting to simply write: Stephen King goes to the beach. In some ways that tells you almost everything you need to know about this book.
-
Books: The Best of Robert E. Howard: Volume 2 Grim Lands
-
Books: Of Lightning and Thunder
-
VFD fights house fire
- Book Review - RANDOM THOUGHTS Several years ago, Dr. Louis Schmier felt compelled to write an essay. Writing was nothing new for the Valdosta State history professor. He’d written books, such as “Valdosta & Lowndes County: A Ray in the Sunbelt.”
- NIGHT/Elie Wiesel This thin, first-person account of one man’s chilling experiences during the Holocaust has been around for nearly 50 years.
- Christ The Lord: Out of Egypt/Anne Rice Anyone who has ever read a few Anne Rice novels will be familiar with the set-up of this book: A first-person narrative, violent events shaping the pace of events while serving as a catalyst for the development of the main character, the protagonist’s wonder at things both material and spiritual, hard realities and often harder supernatural occurrences.
- The Orientalist/Tom Reiss Author Tom Reiss embarks on a search for the true identity of the early 20th century author Kurban Said, who wrote the miniature masterpiece novel “Ali and Nino.
- More Books Headlines
-







