Tuesday, August 5, 2025

Comic Books: The Savage Sword of Conan (#60 - #69)











This run covers from January 1981 to October 1981, so it took me out of high school, through the summer, and into my first semester of college. There were beginning to be excited rumblings (including a proposed storyboard) about the coming Conan film.

Robert E. Howard, although now firmly established in the broader Fantasy genre, was more of an all-purpose pulp writer. In fact, when he passed away, he was publishing a series of boxing stories. Whatever genre he wrote in, his heroes tended to be tough two-fisted loners, cowboys, sailors, or warriors who could fight their way out of almost any situation.  

But he is most closely associated with Weird Tales (‘The Unique Magazine’), where his Conan stories had their debut. He carried on a correspondence with fellow contributor H. P. Lovecraft, the cosmic horror writer. The stories in Weird Tales were … niche, to say the least, and though nerdy were seen to be lowbrow. If you wanted ‘real’ literature, you went to The Atlantic Monthly or Harper’s Magazine for your high-falutin’, prestigious fix. But Howard had something, something that persisted and grew in the popular culture, until now even academics have to sit up and take notice.



Howard’s tales appeal to ‘adolescents of all ages’, but especially to early teen boys, a situation parodied in National Lampoon’s ‘Cohen the Boybarian’. It was not so much his style as his substance that appealed, his set-up and his ‘philosophy’. Even when I was collecting the Del Rey volumes of his work (since sold), I found it a chore reading his prose and seldom read anything all the way through. But I HAD to be the Fantasy Guy. And they were deeply discounted in the Bargain Books catalog.

The Savage Sword (and later the Conan movie) was just about the right mediation level of Howard for me, that is, when they did actually adapt his work. They had plenty of other writers, writing plenty of new tales, all to formula. But even now I am tempted by the hardback omnibus volume of all the old authentic Robert E. Howard Conan tales. There is a part of me, too, that is always enduring (if only in memory) permanent adolescence.




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