...in all their tattered glory |
“I have written Howard pastiches myself, so I can speak both as a reader and an author: Every author leaves his personal mark on whatever he writes; the only man who could write a Robert E. Howard story was Robert E. Howard. Read Howard pastiches as you will—but don’t let anyone kid you that you’re reading Robert E. Howard. It is far more than a matter of imitating adjective usage or analyzing comma-splices. It is a matter of spirit.”While Howard fans these days are spoiled by the Del Reys, prior to 1977 you could not buy a collection of the Conan stories without editorial emendations or the presence of pastiches. Both the widely printed Lancer/Ace collections of the 1960s and 70s and the rarer Gnome Press editions from the 1950s were marred by editorial changes and additional non-Howard material. That all changed with the Berkley Medallion Editions, published by the arrangement of the late, great, Glenn Lord (1931-2011), and edited by legendary horror and swords and sorcery author Karl Edward Wagner (1945-1994). These consist of three books in an aborted series that was supposed to run longer and include all 21 of Howard’s original stories. They include The Hour of the Dragon, The People of the Black Circle, and Red Nails. To prepare the Berkley Medallion Edition manuscript Wagner made photocopies directly from the pages of Weird Tales, correcting only obvious typographical errors.
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I made it a point to grab the hardcovers and the paperbacks with their cool fold out covers.
ReplyDeleteHere here. Well said, sir.
ReplyDeleteI am happy to say that I own all three of these paperbacks with the fold-out covers intact. Very cool.
ReplyDeleteGod bless the immensely talented KEW. It would have been wonderful if they'd allowed him to assemble more of Howard's work in Berkley editions.
I'm jealous, David and Pericles... still hoping one day to obtain copies with the fold-out covers.
ReplyDeleteI too would have liked to have seen Howard's entire ouevre published by Berkley Medallion with KEW forewards/afterwards.