When I heard the news that Howard Andrew Jones was diagnosed with inoperable and fatal brain cancer, it staggered me. I’m still reeling.
Although we’d never met in person, Howard is much more than just an author whose works I admire. He’s a person I admire.
Relentlessly optimistic.
Passionate and informed.
Encouraging and welcoming.
And after all that, he’s also a darned good writer responsible for some books I enjoyed, and recommend you seek out.
I got to know Howard a bit through an online Discord community, Whetstone, which has recently shuttered. We also served together on a Rogues in the House podcast and a video panel, The Best of Sword-and-Sorcery.
But despite meeting him in online venues only, I feel like I knew him.
I’ve heard it said that if an author writes in enough volume, and truly, that he will inevitably end up on the page. I’m not sure if I fully believe this, but I do believe it in the case of Howard.
He was Hanuvar. Relentless in his work, honorable, hopeful that one day he might succeed in his mission.
He was also The Skull, mascot of Tales from the Magician’s Skull, the sword-and-sorcery magazine he edited for Goodman Games. Relentless in his love of sword-and-sorcery, and threatening immolation for anyone who profaned the sacred genre. He reduced many interns to ash, all in good humor of course.
He was a tireless champion of Harold Lamb, whose stories he assembled in an eight-volume “Harold Lamb Library” series for Bison Books. Howard constantly shoehorned Lamb into every conversation about early pulp adventure writers, which was endearing but also opened many eyes (including my own) to Lamb’s underappreciated influence and greatness. Instead of “GOAT-ing” Harold as all-time Lamb champion, we’ll bison him, I guess.
I’m hoping against hope that somehow we might get more stories from his pen. I hate talking about him in past tense, because he's still very much alive. But the news does not sound good.
Cancer steals people in their prime, with no warning. Cancer stole someone near to me, now it threatens Howard’s life. It is an absolute scourge and I hope one day I might live to see it eradicated, or driven back to the pits of hell from whence it came, like Conan did to Thog in Xuthal of the Dust.
Life can be absolute shit.
This heavy news is yet another reminder to live every moment like it matters. Because they all do, and we never know when it may all be taken away.
Prayers for Howard and his family.
It's a shocker, for sure. All thoughts to Howard and his family.
ReplyDeleteI only interacted with him a little online and have not read his books (though I have the first Hanuvar book.) That said I sent in two stories to Magician's Skull and while they were rejected he was nice enough to give encouraging statements.
ReplyDeleteI regret to say I have not yet read his work, but I am nonetheless saddened by this news. I'm with you on cancer. I wish we could gather every malignant cell into one big mass and lock it away deep in Tsotha-lanti's dungeon where it can never harm any people or creatures ever again!
ReplyDeleteThanks for chiming in guys. Ian his stuff is definitely worth reading.
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