Explore the heroic past of fantasy adventure, in sword-and-sorcery epics long buried by the sands of time:
ROBERT E. HOWARD'S "The Frost-King's Daughter," the adventure that led to his immortal Conan series;
LEIGH BRACKETT and RAY BRADBURY'S "Lorelei of the Red Mist," a nearly-forgotten collaboration by two of fantasy's all-time greats;
MANLY WADE WELLMAN;S "Hok Visits the Land of Legends," the last of Wellman's Stone Age fantasies;
and four rare Northwest Smith stories from the unmistakable pen of C.L. MOORE!
Contents: 2 • Introduction: Robert E. Howard • essay by Karl Edward Wagner 7 • The Frost King's Daughter • shortfiction by Robert E. Howard (variant of Gods of the North 1934) 16 • The Frost-Giant's Daughter • [Conan] • (1976) • shortstory by Robert E. Howard 29 • Introduction: C. L. Moore • essay by Karl Edward Wagner 36 • An Autobiographical Sketch of C. L. Moore • essay by C. L. Moore 40 • Quest of the Starstone • [Jirel of Joiry] • (1937) • novelette by C. L. Moore and Henry Kuttner 73 • Nymph of Darkness • [Northwest Smith] • (1935) • shortstory by C. L. Moore and Forrest J. Ackerman 90 • The Genesis of an Invisible Venusienne • essay by Forrest J. Ackerman 92 • The "Nymph" o' Maniack • (1948) • essay by Forrest J. Ackerman 102 • Werewoman • [Northwest Smith] • (1938) • novelette by C. L. Moore 129 • Foreword to "Song in a Minor Key" • essay by Sam Moskowitz 131 • Song in a Minor Key • [Northwest Smith] • (1940) • shortstory by C. L. Moore 137 • Introduction: Leigh Brackett and Ray Bradbury • essay by Karl Edward Wagner 141 • Lorelei of the Red Mist • (1946) • novella by Leigh Brackett and Ray Bradbury 209 • Introduction: Manly Wade Wellman • essay by Karl Edward Wagner 213 • Hok Visits the Land of Legends • [Hok] • (1942) • novella by Manly Wade Wellman 273 • Untitled Hok Fragment • [Hok] • shortfiction by Manly Wade Wellman
Karl Edward Wagner (12 December 1945 – 13 October 1994) was an American writer, editor and publisher of horror, science fiction, and heroic fantasy, who was born in Knoxville, Tennessee and originally trained as a psychiatrist. His disillusionment with the medical profession can be seen in the stories "The Fourth Seal" and "Into Whose Hands". He described his world view as nihilistic, anarchistic and absurdist, and claimed, not entirely seriously, to be related to "an opera composer named Richard". Wagner also admired the cinema of Sam Peckinpah, stating "I worship the film The Wild Bunch".
Karl Wagner has a thing for original manuscripts and likes exposing nifty backstories on story’s. In this volume he presents “The Frost Giant’s Daughter”, one of the first Conan yarns written by Bob Howard. TFGD didn’t sell, so REW rewrote it as The Frost King’s Daughter. He changed Conan to Amara and published it in a fanzine called The Fantasy Fan. Both manuscripts are presented.
The book includes a handful of stories by C.L. Moore with introduction essays by himself and others.
There is a story started by Leigh Brackett, but finished by Ray Bradbury. Swords & Planets is not a medium Bradbury wrote too much of making this unique.
He finishes the book with two Hok stories by Manly Wade Wellman. The first one is great. Wellman sets his Hok up as the source of Hercules myths. The second is a short fragment and is the last thing Wellman would ever write as he died shortly afterwards.
Wagner takes an interesting tack by selecting four authors and doing a deep-dive into rarer, earlier, and lesser-known material. This approach is new to me, feels tailored to an enthusiast of a certain type, and despite its merits may not be overall successful. The material is not _quite_ a barrel scrape, but is getting there.
Howard's section is two versions of "The Frost-Giant's Daughter", including an early version that originally did not feature Conan. Yet the only perceptible difference is a search-and-replace from the original "Amra". Wagner even makes an unusual statement that casual readers are best skipping to the Conan version.
For C L Moore there is "Quest of the Starstone" which is an intriguing study of the difference between Northwest Smith and Jirel of Joiry, particularly in how Jirel is concerned with appearing weak and the evil wizard threatens to find someone to 'tame' her.
"Nymph of Darkness" is a collaboration with Forrest J Ackerman, whom I assume is responsible for using the words "thru" and "tho" instead of "through" and "though". This is a thing I simply cannot respect. Ackerman continues his literary violence with two unnecessary articles.
Brackett's "Lorelei of the Red Mist" is proto-Eric John Stark, and she later revisits the idea of the 'sea of buoyant red mist'. Ray Bradbury apparently finished the story at her request, seamlessly matching the style and action after a certain point.
Manly Wade Wellman has a Hok story and fragment, and if you're not into jungle adventure then you are not into his contribution. I was not into his contribution.
And thus I finish my first book of 2020. I enjoyed this closing section of Manly Wade Wellman and Hok. The world lost what sounds like would have been an amazing tale with Wellman's fall.
The book begins and ends marvelously, but lags in the middle, and overall ends up less impressive than expected. Can't do more than three stars, though opening's a 5. I sure hope EOVIII delivers better.
Another good collection of short heroic fantasy stories edited by Karl Edward Wagner. Includes Robert E. Howard's first Conan story, as well as C. L. Moore, Leigh Brackett, and Ray Bradbury.
A very nice collection of heroic fantasy featuring Robert E. Howard, Manly Wade Wellman, C.L. Moore, and a collaboration between Leigh Brackett and Ray Bradbury. How could you go wrong with a line-up like that? The introductions and notes are also interesting and informative. This is a good one.
Another excellent collection of heroic fantasy edited by Karl Edward Wagner. I think I had read all the fiction before, by Robert E. Howard, C. L. Moore, (with Henry Kuttner and Forest J. Ackerman as coauthors on different stories), Leigh Brackett with Ray Bradbury as coauthor, and Manly Wade Wellman, but I was glad to read them again. KEW's introductions are worth reading, as were the nonfiction giving the stories context.
The best volume of the series, which finishes with an original, wise and optimistic hunting adventure of Hok the Cro-Mag. With that added to hundreds of pages’ worth of tales by Catherine Moore, Leigh Brackett, REH and Ray Bradbury, what’s not to like?