“Conan and the Little People: Robert E. Howard and Lovecraft’s Theory”, another fascinating new ‘correlate all the contents’ essay by Bobby Derie.
Conan and the Little People
14 Monday Jan 2019
Posted in Historical context, REH, Scholarly works
14 Monday Jan 2019
Posted in Historical context, REH, Scholarly works
“Conan and the Little People: Robert E. Howard and Lovecraft’s Theory”, another fascinating new ‘correlate all the contents’ essay by Bobby Derie.
13 Sunday Jan 2019
Posted in New books, REH, Scholarly works
Forthcoming books from McFarland, picked from their new Spring 2019 catalogue:
* Journeys to the Underworld and Heavenly Realm in Ancient and Medieval Literature. (Seems relevant to an understanding of the wider context of The Dream-Quest of Unknown Kadath and others) (Already published)
* The Detective and the Artist: Painters, Poets and Writers in Crime Fiction, 1840s-1970s. (First sections likely to be relevant to an understanding of the context of “The Call of Cthulhu” and others) (February)
* The Horror Comic Never Dies: a Grisly History. A short history of 150 pages, seemingly fannish but deeply informed. (February)
04 Friday Jan 2019
Posted in Odd scratchings, REH
Having yesterday found “The Dealings of Daniel Kesserich” as an early example of an early strongly Lovecraft-influenced tale of substantial length, today I also found something similar for R.E. Howard.
The first writer to closely follow Robert E. Howard into sword and sorcery was apparently one Clifford Ball. Having been an avid young reader of Weird Tales magazine since 1925 he produced six stories for Weird Tales from 1937-1941. Wikipedia has it that…
The setting of the first three is vaguely like Howard’s Hyborian Age of warring kingdoms, and features the barbarian adventurers Duar, an amnesiac king protected by a guardian sprite, and Rald the thief and mercenary.
Interesting, but is he worth a look today? Well, he was good enough to be published in Weird Tales in the 1930s… and I see from Archive.org search snippets that the sentiment from readers of Weird Tales was that he was a “neat craftsman” for “Duar” and that “Thief” was “the best story” of the issue.
All three Howard-alike stories are available to read as scans on Archive.org. In order of publication:
I can’t immediately find anyone stating that he added much to the roots of sword and sorcery other than the hero’s “guardian sprite”, and his other later stories are said to be fairly conventional fantasies. But he obviously did his bit to help preserve for a few more years the sword and sorcery approach Howard had developed with Conan, and showed other writers that there was demand and payment for it. He dropped from sight circa 1938.
31 Monday Dec 2018
Posted in Lovecraftian arts, New books, REH, Scholarly works
A new 120-page book claims to catalogue all the monsters of Robert E. Howard. Conan: Horrors of the Hyborean Age appears to be one of those PDF books for gamers that that give them the monster ‘stats’, but which are also rather useful for the reference shelves of writers.
Not sure about the cover, though. I recently re-read the Howard Conan stories in audiobook and I don’t quite remember Wonder Woman fighting a T. Rex, as per this book’s cover. Nor the distinctly LOTR orc who flanks Conan.
As a gamebook it needs to be interflipped with the Robert E. Howard’s Conan: Adventures in an Age Undreamed core rule-book. There appear to be other catalogue-like guide books to Conan’s world in the same series, one on Ancient Ruins & Cursed Cities and a guide to Nameless Cults, Cosmology and Gods. Apparently they all have inspiring art inside, and I’d guess also some maps.
10 Monday Dec 2018
Posted in Historical context, Lovecraftian arts, New books, REH, Scholarly works
Added to Open Lovecraft…
* Philip Emery, “Revivifying the Ur-text: a reconstruction of sword-&-sorcery as a literary form”, PhD thesis at Loughborough University, UK, 2018. (The author is a North Staffordshire writer, of several horror novels. Here he asks if, given this literary genre’s relative neglect in recent decades, it is possible to identify the genre’s core characteristics and then use these “to create a work that realizes the form’s potential to exist as literature”. Explores the structural development of the Ur-genre as it emerged in the stories of R.E. Howard (influenced by Lovecraft in terms of the horror elements), then surveys de Camp’s later contributions and distortions, and generally seeks to identify the “pristine elements” at the core of the genre’s once-flourishing form which are still available to creative writers).
09 Sunday Dec 2018
Posted in Historical context, REH, Scholarly works
Bobby Derie has a new and comprehensive survey of “Robert E. Howard in the Biographies of H. P. Lovecraft”. The first half usefully steps us through how Howard gradually crept into the Lovecraft biographies, as decades of scholarship put the peices together. In the second half Derie surveys what uses various recent writers on Howard and Lovecraft appear to have made of the best biographies, and Derie finds most recent efforts wanting in some way. He usefully includes the two recent biographical Lovecraft graphic novels in this assessment, though gives the nod to one and finds only some slight dramatic licence in the other.
I’ve taken the liberty of using his final paragraphs as a source for a handy guide list:
* Don’t take De Camp at face value. Though pioneering, and with direct access to those who (hazily) remembered the 1930s, he didn’t have all the facts. Remember also that he was embedded in a particular cultural and publishing milieu, and that you need to know enough about that to spot where and how it’s influencing the text.
* Find out what the best recent Howard biographies are, read them and use them.
* Make sure you’re using the accurate Howard texts for the fiction.
* Read the volumes of Howard letters and Howard-Lovecraft letters.
* Don’t go in for heavy over-reliance on I Am Providence. A very great source, yes. But not if: i) you’re just rehashing it so as to crank out another tick-box article for your academic C.V.; and ii) you are assuming it’s exhaustive and that it’s ‘all that it is possible to say’; and iii) you’re assuming that certain key events (such as the rejection of “Cool Air”) haven’t been recoloured by new facts found since publication.
07 Friday Dec 2018
Posted in Odd scratchings, REH
The dates for the Robert E. Howard Days 2019 have been announced: 7th and 8th June 2019 in Cross Plains, Texas. All the regular events, plus the promise of… “a few surprises for you”.
Ben Freiberg has a fine and seemingly comprehensive online collection of recordings of talks and panels from the ‘Howard Days’ held in previous years, with good audio.
30 Friday Nov 2018
Posted in Lovecraftian arts, Podcasts etc., REH
Another audio experiment. This time it’s an experiment with the voice of a human reader, rather than a generated TTS robo-voice.
Text: Robert E. Howard’s “The Hyborian Age” (c. 1930s), in which Howard recounts the historical background for Conan.
Source: A full reading of “The Hyborian Age” in the form of the April 2018 public-domain Librivox recording. The Librivox reading was done by a young reader named ‘Klaatu’ whose voice I felt was not quite suited to the weight of the material. I added some pauses to this audio, for pacing, and I also had to remove one section in which a few lines of text had been repeated twice but not excised.
Task: To use the free audio software Audacity to try to change this higher Librivox voice down to a more suitably deep “Wayne June” style, if possible. Listeners to H.P. Lovecraft audiobooks will be familiar with Wayne June’s deep gravelly voice. More bass could of course be approximated on-the-fly in real-time with the likes of AIMP and its pitch-shift and bass-boost options, but here I wanted to see if a better result could be had by using the power of Audacity and its specialised plugins.
Workflow:
1) I added a “Wayne June” effect in Audacity with the free RoVee VoiceChanger plugin. Settings used are seen on the screenshot…
2) The result was certainly rather “Wayne June”, but was slightly ess-y in my high-response headphones. I then de-essed in Audacity, with the free Spitfish De-esser plugin.
3) There was some “bass bubble” on the pitch shifted reading. I tried the addition of suitable background music, as a subtle form of masking.
Conclusion: Successful, but not entirely so… mostly due to a little ‘more bubble than gravel’. A slightly lighter touch on the RoVee VoiceChanger settings might be tried next time. However, the level of the success suggested that longer audiobooks on Librivox could be “Wayne June-ised” with relatively little effort, and with more aesthetic success than pitch-shifting and bass-boosting in AIMP.
The result: A reading of R. E. Howard’s “The Hyborian Age” on Archive.org. 55 minutes.
11 Sunday Nov 2018
Posted in REH, Scholarly works
Messages from Crom spots the online pages for the Glenn Lord Collection of Robert E. Howard: A Preliminary Inventory of the Collection at the Harry Ransom Center. A huge 32 archival boxes, complete with a 2.6Mb .XLS spreadsheet download — which an internal date-stamp says was last updated October 2018.
27 Saturday Oct 2018
Posted in Lovecraftian arts, New books, Podcasts etc., REH
S.T. Joshi’s latest blog post notes an interesting audiobook, The Gods of Easter Island and Other Poems by Robert E. Howard.
27 poems expertly read and with some musical accompaniment. Available as a physical CD by mail-order from Fedogan and Bremer Books.
17 Wednesday Oct 2018
Posted in Historical context, Odd scratchings, REH
It would be interesting to have, at some point, a book titled something like Lovecraft’s Unused Monsters, Cultists and Story-Settings. It would be a sort of expansion of the Commonplace Book, in which the complete letters are scoured for unused monsters, cultists, and glints of story ideas and settings. Doubtless Derleth once trod the same path, and others after him, but it might be nice to see all the possibilities that he mined stripped back to their Lovecraft originals, neatly organised and with the sources given and correlated.
In the meantime, here’s the first in what may be a very occasional series on this blog:
Lovecraft’s Unused Monsters, Cultists and Story-Settings:
Name: The Pigeon Flyers.
Appearance: Appear to be sinisterly beautiful pigeon-breeding youths.
Status: Messengers who serve “obscene, amorphous serpent-gods” on Thog, dark moon of Yuggoth.
Location: Rooftops of tenements in Hell’s Kitchen, New York City.
Time: Early 1920s.
In the early 1920s H.P. Lovecraft took his first tour of the notorious Hell’s Kitchen in New York City, in the company of its reluctant resident Everett McNeil. Lovecraft was especially struck by the pigeon-flyers of this tough Irish neighbourhood, with their pigeon-lofts perched high on filth-spattered tenement roofs…
… sinister pigeon-breeders on filth-choked roofs sending birds of space out into black unknown gulfs with unrepeatable messages to the obscene, amorphous serpent-gods thereof
The idea was used by Lovecraft, though only in the “The Pigeon Flyers” (Fungi From Yuggoth). Since “The Pigeon Flyers” is an obvious inversion of Genesis 8:11 (“And the dove came in to him in the evening; and, lo, in her mouth was an olive leaf pluckt off: so Noah knew that the waters were abated from off the earth”), one wonders if Lovecraft also knew that Biblical law forbade a class of people called the ‘pigeon flyers’ from giving testimony. Had he once mused on how he might tie this nugget of historical fact about an unspeakable group, with a supernatural slant on the common idea of the birds as being message-carriers?
Lovecraft revisited a similar Bible-invoking theme, of a flock of birds seeking the wide waters for a now-sunken homeland, in his Fungi poem “Nostalgia” (c. 1930?).
It might be casually assumed that Lovecraft’s use of “sinister” in “The Pigeon Flyers” implies wizened or even wizardly old men. But, in a 1930 letter to Derleth, Lovecraft specified that the ‘pigeon flyers’ of Hell’s Kitchen in the early 1920s were youths and not the tobacco-marinated old men that we today associate with the sport. Lovecraft elsewhere refers to the “cherubic blond youths” of Hell’s Kitchen (Letters from New York, page 30) and their two chief activities of pigeon-breeding and building bonfires. Thus, in a fictional use, their “sinister” aspect would have likely been their preternatural beauty set amid the ammonium stenches and squalor of the pigeon-lofts. That they serve “serpent-gods” would further heighten the intrinsic symbolism.
Some readers might vaguely recall that R.E. Howard once used the pigeon idea in horror. Howard scholars may correct me, but it seems that Howard’s Lovecraft-alike story “Pigeons from Hell” (1934) didn’t arise from his seeing Lovecraft’s poem “The Pigeon Flyers” in late summer 1930 and/or corresponding with Lovecraft on the difficulty of making the intrinsically comical pigeon into a bird of weird horror. Apparently it’s claimed that the Howard story arose instead from memories of “Howard’s grandmother’s ghost stories”, long ago told of old deserted pigeon-roost mansion houses in the American south. Though it’s certain that Howard had earlier expressed admiration for Lovecraft’s use of “the unique grisliness of the notion” of whippoorwill birds in “The Dunwich Horror”.
Lovecraft’s space-pigeons are able to travel through the “black unknown gulfs” to Thog, a dark moon of Yuggoth on the edge of the solar system (“what they brought from Thog beneath their wings” — “The Pigeon Flyers”). This implies that what in earthly terms are thought of as the “serpent-gods” are located on Thog. Or more likely under, in caves and/or under an ice-sea. Presumably “what they brought” to Earth evokes fungi, and the observation arose due to Lovecraft spotting the fungi-like parasitic growths often seen on diseased urban pigeons. The travel is thus two-way, “unrepeatable messages” are sent and then small podules of strange Yuggothian fungi are brought back to Earth. Possibly this fungi has something to do with maintaining the preternatural youth of the Pigeon Flyers.

07 Sunday Oct 2018
Posted in Podcasts etc., REH
Added to my R.E. Howard audio books listings page, which is a page of free Conan readings listed in their story-world chronological order:
There is also a Books for the Blind audiobook of the collection of stories Conan the Swordsman (1978). This collection of briskly-plotted gap-fillers for the Conan chronology is from Nyberg / Lin Carter / de Camp. Their stories successfully mimic Howard, only lacking some of the small telling details that he carefully wove into his stories. Their book has, in order:
“The People of the Summit” (after “Rogues in the House”) (begins at 1 hour 12 minutes into the book reading)
“Shadows in the Dark” (after “Black Colossus”)
“The Star of Khorala” (after “Shadows in Zamboula”)
“The Gem in the Tower” (between “The People of the Black Circle” and “The Pool of the Black One”)
“The Ivory Goddess” (before “Beyond the Black River”)
“Moon of Blood” (after “Beyond the Black River”)
I see there’s also a Books for the Blind audiobook of the Carter / de Camp Conan the Liberator, but I’ve left that off my page. It does fit a big gap in the Howard chronology, telling of how Conan became a King, but is not very well reviewed. While painted on a suitably wide canvas, it’s apparently more of a medieval military novel in which the depiction of Conan is sparse and a bit iffy in terms of his characterisation.