Robert E. Howard
Encyclopedia : R : RO : ROB : Robert E. Howard
Robert Ervin Howard (January 22, 1906 – June 11, 1936) was an American writer of fantasy, horror, pulp and historical adventure stories published mainly in Weird Tales magazine in the 1930s, where he was one of the "Unique Magazine's" most popular authors. His works have become highly influential among writers and fans of the sword and sorcery sub-genre.
Biography
Robert E. Howard was born in Peaster, Texas, the son of Dr. Isaac Mordecai Howard and Hester Jane Ervin Howard. His family had lived in various places in south, east and west Texas, as well as western Oklahoma, before settling in Cross Plains in central Texas in 1919.Howard began to write at age 15, and was first published four years later when his story Spear and Fang appeared in the July 1925 edition of Weird Tales magazine. Many more of Howard's stories were published in Weird Tales and he had his first 'cover' in 1926.
On June 11, 1936 at around 8 o'clock in the morning, after learning his tubercular mother was unlikely to regain consciousness from her coma, Howard settled into the front seat of his car with a borrowed .38 Colt automatic and shot himself in the head. He never regained consciousness, and died at 4 o'clock that day. His mother died the following day, and they shared a funeral on June 14th. Both are buried in Greenleaf Cemetery in Brownwood.
On the morning of his death, Howard typed this couplet on a strip of paper found in the billfold in his hip pocket:
All fled—all done, so lift me on the pyre—
The Feast is over, and the lamps expire.
This couplet, once thought to be a paraphrase from Ernest Dowson's poem "Non Sum Qualis Eram Bonae Sub Regno Cynarae," is actually from a little-known poem entitled "The House Of Cæsar" by Viola Garvin.
Writing
Howard wrote stories in many genres, but his most famous were sword and sorcery, a genre of fantasy based on war, fighting and magic. Indeed, many consider him the father of the genre in the same way that J.R.R. Tolkien is considered the father of epic fantasy. Howard created one of the most popular of all fantasy characters in the barbarian warrior Conan, who he based on a celtic warrior drawing inspiration from his own Scottish Gaelic decent. Conan, first appeared in December 1932. To add realism and depth to his new character Howard developed the fictional Hyborian Age. His other characters include the Atlantean King Kull, the Puritan adventurer Solomon Kane, the Pict Bran Mak Morn, drawn from the pre-celtic people that inhabited Scotland till the early medieval period, and the female warriors Dark Agnes de la Fere and Red Sonya of Rogatino, the latter the prototype for the better known Red Sonja of Marvel Comics fame.Another field in which Howard was successful was supernatural horror, where he borrowed heavily from his peer and correspondent Howard Phillips Lovecraft, adding his own trademarks of quickly paced action and strong characterization. His original creations like the forbidden tome Nameless Cults by Friedrich von Junzt are now considered 'canon' in the Cthulhu Mythos.
Howard also wrote in other genres:
- Fantasy/horror based in the American South and South-West. For example, Pigeons from Hell, and other stories featuring sheriff Kirby Buckner.
- Historical fiction. For example, his story Gates of Empire involves a fictional character in the struggles between Shirkuh, Shawar, and Amalric for the control of Egypt, the story culminating in one of Saladin's famous early battles in the spring of 1167 AD.
- Boxing stories. Especially the tales of Sailor Steve Costigan (sometimes known as Sailor Dennis Dorgan).
- Westerns. Especially the humorous yarns featuring Breckinridge Elkins.
- Howard also wrote a Science Fiction story called Almuric detailing the struggles of a boxer from Earth being teleported through space and time to a far off world of Almuric, where the people are barbaric and savage and the women goddess-like in their beauty.
Howard engineered his tales so that a great cataclysm always came to seal and divide each era from the next one, so each civilization was barely conscious of the ones that came before, and even then only in myths and legends (for example Allison's slaying of the 'Great Worm' provided us with the myths of Siegfried and Beowulf).
In one of the most memorable Howardian tales ever (Kings of the Night) a cross-over between different sagas is presented as the Pictish chieftain Bran Mak Morn magically conjures Kull the Valusian from his time to aid him in battle against the Romans and their allies.
Contemporary readers may take issue with what could be seen as a distinctly anti-modernist and racialist worldview in much of Howard's ideology and literature:
- The ancient empires fall, the dark-skinned peoples fade and even the demons of antiquity gasp their last, but over all stands the Aryan barbarian, white-skinned, cold-eyed, dominant, the supreme fighting man of the earth.
- "Although he had his faults as a writer, Howard was a natural storyteller, whose narratives are unmatched for vivid, gripping, headlong action. His heroes... are larger than life: men of mighty thews, hot passions, and indomitable will, who easily dominate the stories through which they stride. In fiction, the difference between a writer who is a natural storyteller and one who is not is like the difference between a boat that will float and one that will not. If the writer has this quality, we can forgive many other faults; if not, no other virtue can make up for the lack, any more than gleaming paint and sparkling brass on a boat make up for the fact that it will not float." -- L. Sprague de Camp
Trivia
- On the subject of Howard, L. Sprague de Camp states the following in his book Literary Swordsmen and Sorcerers: The Makers of Heroic Fantasy concerning an interview with J. R. R. Tolkien: "We sat in the garage for a couple of hours, smoking pipes, drinking beer, and talking about a variety of things. Practically anything in English literature, from Beowulf down, Tolkien had read and could talk intelligently about. He indicated that he rather liked Howard's Conan stories."
- Howard's hometown of Cross Plains celebrates Howard Days annually on the second Saturday of June. Events include tours of his restored home, special postal cancellations, and the Cross Plains Library displays a selection of original Howard manuscripts.
In popular culture
- Four movies have been based on Howard's works: Conan the Barbarian, Conan the Destroyer, Red Sonja and Kull the Conqueror.
- One movie has been based on Howard's life: The Whole Wide World.
References
External links
- [Conan wiki • Robert E. Howard]
- [Conan's official website]
- [Conan the Barbarian at AmratheLion.com]
- [A more detailed biography]
- ["The Ultimate Cthulhu Mythos Book List"] - Listing of all mythos novels, anthologies, collections, comic books, and more.
- [www.rehoward.com]
- [A Short Biography of Robert E. Howard] by Rusty Burke
- [Robert Ervin Howard] from the Handbook of Texas Online
- [Robert E. Howard United Press Association]
- [The Cimmerian - the premier journal concerned with the life and writings of Robert E. Howard]
- [The Whole Wide World (1996)] A film relating his relationship with Novalyne Price
- [The Hour of the Dragon] Howard's full length Conan novel at Wikisource.
- [Black Mask Collection of free Howard ebooks]
- [A comprehensive bibliography of Robert E. Howard's works]
- [A document on the copyright and ownership status of Robert E. Howard's works (including list of works in the public domain)]
- [] at the Internet Speculative Fiction Database
- [Robert Ervin Howard] pages at [RealityEnds]
- [Howard Museum] in [Cross Plains, Texas]
- [CNN story on Howard Days]
From Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia. Original article here. Support Wikipedia by contributing or donating.
All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License See Wikipedia Copyrights for details.
