Home Feed
Home
Search
Search
Add Review, Blurb, Quote
Add
Activity
Activity
Profile
Profile
#Conan
review
Bigwig
Conan | Robert E. Howard
post image
Pickpick

For days when you dream of calling your enemies “fatherless curs” just before enjoying some aggressive negotiations with your Crom-given broadsword…there is Conan. The original and best still holds up with imaginative short stories of adventure in a long forgotten time. You don‘t have to know or care about any of the modest world-building…each clever, funny, exciting tale catches up with Conan right before the mayhem begins. Crom protect you!

review
MegaWhoppingCosmicBookwyrm
The Conan Chronicles | Robert Jordan
post image
Pickpick

4 ⭐️s
Not my favorite work by Jordan, but still enjoyable. I‘m only familiar with the Conan character through the Schwarzenegger films and a handful of comics my dad had from his childhood. I quite enjoyed the three adventures in this book. I‘ll be hunting for the second book and am intrigued enough to start picking up more Conan books, especially stories by the original creator, Robert E. Howard.

My final read of 2022!

blurb
MegaWhoppingCosmicBookwyrm
The Conan Chronicles | Robert Jordan
post image

Maps in books make me giddy. 😍😅

AllDebooks Oh my, that's a great map!!! I love them too. 2y
32 likes1 comment
review
RamsFan1963
The Coming Of Conan The Cimmerian | Robert Ervin Howard
post image
Mehso-so

94/150 Surprisingly, I've never read a Howard Conan story. I've seen the movies, read the comics, read stories by other authors (Lin Carter and L. Sprague De Camp spring to mind), but never the originals. Taken as straight adventure stories, they're excellent. Conan is a great character, short on dialogue, always jumping into the middle of the action. Unfortunately, by today's standards, these stories are staggeringly racist (Continued below) ⬇️

RamsFan1963 (too many times Conan has to save the white woman from the monstrous black or dark skinned monsters) and sexist. Except for Belit, the Pirate Queen, there isn't a single female character who isn't a simpering, whimpering child who must be rescued by Conan, and at the end fall into his big strong arms. I know its unfair to judge stories written in the 1930s by today's standards, but this still makes for tough reading at times. ⭐⭐⭐ 2y
Bookwomble @RamsFan1963 You'd better give his story "Black Canaan" a miss, then, as it makes his Conan stories look quite progressive in comparison ? 2y
RamsFan1963 @Bookwomble After listening to these stories, I understand why Lovecraft was such a fan of Howard's writing. He found a kindred spirit. 2y
Bookwomble @RamsFan1963 Despite some egregious examples of explicit racism, I think in general Howard was more simply expressing the cultural & (sadly) scientific orthodoxy of his time & place, whereas Lovecraft was more consciously supremacist. REH was usually less concerned about "racial purity" than HPL. Of the Weird Triumvirate, I'd say Clark Ashton Smith is least troublesome in this regard, though naturally he still can't escape retrospective criticism. 2y
57 likes4 comments
blurb
TuesdayReviews
Conan the Rogue | John Maddox Roberts
post image

I hope nothing important happens this page... #usedbooks

Alwaysbeenaloverofbooks 😱😱😱 3y
Bookwomble 😫 3y
bookwyrm7 Oh no! 😱🤣 7mo
8 likes3 comments
quote
Bookwomble
Marchers Of Valhalla | Robert E. Howard
post image

“Stand up naked in the storm! Shake back your mane and face the thunders and the giant winds that roar between the worlds. Face the rush of events, the gigantic Truths, the dizzying realities. Be one with the tempests, the roaring ocean, and the swirling constellations."

- A Thunder of Trumpets

blurb
Bookwomble
Marchers Of Valhalla | Robert E. Howard
post image

The first story in this collection, "The Grey God Passes", is a blend of historical fiction and fantasy, set in early medieval Ireland, centring on the bloody Battle of Clontarf, in which 11,000 people were slain, the High King Brian Boru was killed, but the power of the Vikings in Ireland was broken. The fantasy elements of the De Danaan "Dark People", prophesy and spectral interventions of pagan gods are woven in as part of the characters' ??

Bookwomble worldview, and feel natural and atmospheric.
I've "only" had this one for 10 years, so it feels like a relatively recent purchase ? Just what I need on a rather dull Bank Holiday Monday, vibrant tales of action, adventure and macabre horror which don't need too much brain-power to enjoy.
4y
DivineDiana “I‘ve “only” had this one for 10 years”. I can do identify with this comment! 😂 4y
Bookwomble @DivineDiana ? I'm glad it's not just me! A book I read last month had been languishing shelf-bound for over 40 years, so "only" fits for the present one ? 4y
See All 6 Comments
Riveted_Reader_Melissa From that cover, I‘d say 70‘s- 80‘s artwork, but your description sounds really good, I‘d never guess Ireland or fae from the artwork they picked. And I love the “only” ten years too, I can definitely relate! 4y
Bookwomble @Riveted_Reader_Melissa It's a 1977 edition, the artwork by Melvyn Grant, who was a prolific sci-fi and fantasy artist in the '70s and '80s, so you were spot on 🙂 4y
Bookwomble @Riveted_Reader_Melissa Oh, and Howard wrote all kinds of stories for the pulp magazines. As well as the Conan stories he's best known for, he wrote horror, western, boxing and sports stories, adventure, historical, and even romance stories of a "spicy" nature, though probably tame by today's standards. 4y
26 likes3 stack adds6 comments
quote
Bookwomble
Marchers Of Valhalla | Robert E. Howard
post image

"It is the death-grip. Now comes the reaping of kings, the garnering of chiefs like a harvest. Gigantic shadows stalk red-handed across the world, and night is falling on Asgaard. I hear the cries of long-dead heroes whistling in the void, and the shouts of forgotten gods. To each there is an appointed time, and even the gods must die..."

- The Grey God Passes

Howard's Grey God, Odin, predicting doom before the Battle of Clontarf, Ireland, 1014.

TobeyTheScavengerMonk Dude could write. 3y
22 likes1 comment
blurb
Bookwomble
Conan | Robert E. Howard
post image

@TheNeverendingTBR At the risk of being a bore (last Conan post, I promise!), these are the editions I grew up with. They're Howard's stories, edited by de Camp, filled out with adaptations of other Howard stories, and with pastiches written by de Camp and Carter, with other authors drafted in towards the end. Anathema to Howard purists, but I'm still fond of them 😊

TheNeverendingTBR Absolutely love the covers, are they Sphere publications? 4y
Bookwomble @TheNeverendingTBR Yes - Sphere was one of my favourite imprints for sci fi and fantasy. Most of the covers are by Frank Frazetta, who was a brilliant artist. 4y
GingerAntics Wait, these were books? I was younger than the intended audience for the TV show in the 90s, but I watched that and Xena Warrior Princess religiously!!! 4y
See All 12 Comments
Bookwomble @GingerAntics Yes, these are books 😄 Howard wrote in the '30s, creating 100s of stories for the pulps across many genres, & pretty much creating the Sword & Sorcery fantasy genre. His work was looked down on as disposable trash, & were it not for a core of fans who championed his work, he'd have sunk into obscurity. He died by suicide at a tragically young age. Incredible to imagine what he'd have achieved if he'd found a way through his distress 4y
GingerAntics @Bookwomble poor guy! I have to read these books now. It‘s amazing how much of a nerd I was as a kid and never knew it. It seems every so often I discover a new really nerdy thing I was into, always much younger than the intended audience. 4y
Bookwomble @GingerAntics Crypto-nerd! 😄💗 4y
GingerAntics @Bookwomble there is a term for that?! 💙💙💙 4y
Bookwomble @GingerAntics There is now! 😁 4y
GingerAntics @Bookwomble oh, you invented a word. I like it!!! 4y
Bookwomble @GingerAntics I think we co-created it 😄 4y
GingerAntics @Bookwomble I helped create a word!!! I feel so clever all of a sudden. 4y
16 likes1 stack add12 comments
blurb
RamsFan1963
Conan The Swordsman | L. Sprague de Camp, Lin Carter, Bjorn Nyberg
post image

I am posting one book per day from my extensive to-be-read collection. No description or reason for wanting to read the book. Some are old and some will be new. Don't judge me - I have a lot of books.
Day 128

#tbrmountain #bookbuyingdiet