I took a (small, calculated, $8) risk on the latest volume of The Dark Man: Journal of Robert E. Howard and Pulp Studies, purchasing it based on the table of contents and the fact that editors Jason Ray Carney and Nicole Emmelhainz-Carney are talented and invested in this venture.
I was not disappointed.
Some may not be happy with the direction taken by this semi-venerable journal, which has published 27 issues since its debut in 1990. Jason and Nicole have decided to branch out to the broader field of pulp studies, rather than a laser focus on Robert E. Howard. I think it was a great move. We need a journal that fosters discussion on other Howard-inspired or Howard-adjacent writers, such as Karl Edward Wagner. And we get that with the latest edition.
Vol. 12.1 includes seven pieces, ranging from editorial to
interview, to scholarship to book review, and runs 113 pages.
First the news: I was thrilled to hear that Gary
Hoppenstand, editor of the short-lived but highly regarded fanzine/semi-pro
zine Midnight Sun, is under contract with McFarland to write a book analyzing
Karl Edward Wagner’s Kane studies. McFarland is an independent publisher of academic
nonfiction with a bent towards pop culture. I’ve got a couple of their books on
my shelf, including J.R.R. Tolkien,
Robert E. Howard, and the Birth of Modern Fantasy (which I reviewed for Skelos #1) and Michael Moorcock: Fiction, Fantasy, and the World’s Pain, by Mark
Scroggins. The latter was an invaluable help to me in the writing of Flame and
Crimson. I am very much looking forward to this new book on Kane, for which the
scholarship is lacking. The preface will be written by the great David Drake.
This news was revealed in an interview conducted with
Hoppenstand by Luke Dodd, one of the co-hosts of the Cromcast podcast. Dodd for the same issue contributed a publication history of Midnight Sun, about as thorough a
treatment of that long defunct ‘zine that we can hope to get. Dodd used available resources
form the likes of the ISFDB with additional information from Hoppenstand to
fill in some of the blanks. Hoppenstand launched Midnight Sun as a teenager to help place some of Wagner’s Kane
stories. Hoppenstand had written to KEW enthusiastically after reading Death Angel’s Shadow, starting a
correspondence that led to Hoppenstand placing the likes of “Lynortis Reprise,”
“In the Lair of Yslsl,” and “The Dark Muse,” among other stories, poems, and
artwork. Wagner had experienced difficulty placing some of his Kane stories and
Hoppenstand and Midnight Sun filled
the void, later branching out and publishing other genre authors including David
Drake and H.H. Hollis. Midnight Sun
published its fifth and final issue in 1979, a victim of Hoppenstand's lack of funding.
Given the scarcity of material published on Karl Edward
Wagner I was particularly happy to read Dodd’s pieces, but there are
some other entries in TDM vol. 12.1 worth talking about.
I approached “REH N-grams: A Study of Cultural Trends
Related to Robert E. Howard” by Williard M. Oliver with some trepidation; even
for an REH and S&S nerd this one seemed rather esoteric and data-geeky. I
have read the related “Statistics in the Hyborian Age: An Introduction to Stylometry” in
Conan Meets the Academy and that one, while having some points of merit, left
me a bit cold, mainly because it dwells too long on explaining what stylometry
is and too little on its application to REH; Oliver’s piece however was on
point. The author used a tool called the Google Books N-gram Viewer to analyze the
recurrence of terms related to Howard and his creations and popular phrases. While the Viewer only
includes books published up through the year 2000, the tool helped Oliver demonstrate
a Howard presence in the 1930s, a slight but minor rise in the 1940s and 50s,
then a significant increase from the late 60s through the 1980s. Which tracks
rather nicely with the Arkham/Gnome, Lancer/Ace, publications, and the oft-told
stories of how these latter books brought many readers into the fold. In short, it adds statistical rigor to conjecture.
Quinn Forskitt’s “Building a Universe: An Analysis of the
Works, Lives, and Influences of the Lovecraft Circle” is an invited essay, a
boiled down version of Forskitt’s master’s thesis. While this information is
likely well-known to the die-hards, it’s great to see new scholars and scholarship in the
field. Very readable and engaging work. I found “Adapting Lovecraft to Video
Games: What is Lost, What is Gained,” to be less interesting, only because I’m
not a video gamer, but I have to say this is highly original, and probably a
must-read for players of Hidetaka Miyazaki’s Bloodborne. The author also has a strong grasp of what makes
Lovecraft’s stories unique, and hard to adapt in a visual medium.
Rusty Burke has a review of the new REH biography by Todd
Vick, Renegades and Rogues. While Burke invites the work, defends the need for further
REH biography, and so welcomes it on his shelf, he does declare it only half
successful in its stated purpose: It answers the question of who Robert E.
Howard was, but not why he was important, Burke concludes. In full disclosure I have
not read Renegades and Rogues.
All in all, I enjoyed the heck out of this issue of TDM. And
I’m greatly looking forward to Hoppenstand’s book.