REHupa

The Robert E. Howard United Press Association

Archive for April, 2008

The $40.00 She-Devil

Posted by Morgan Holmes on 24th April 2008

A friend of mine mentioned in an e mail that he did not have the paperback edition of Grey Maiden by Arthur D. Howden Smith. A great collection of stories I may add. Grey Maiden is the name of a sword forged in antiquity and passed down through the ages. Robert E. Howard probably read the stories in the pages of Adventure in the middle 1920s especially since Donn Othna carries a sword quite similar to Grey Maiden in “The King’s Service.” Anyway, I knew of a hybrid comic book/used bookstore that had a copy. I stopped on the way home from work and sure enough, found a copy. I noticed in the vintage science fiction paperback section there was a new addition of almost a whole shelf  of Robert E. Howard paperbacks. Lancer Conans, Berkleys, Zebras, Ace- all were in beautiful condition within the mylar bags. I checked prices which ranged generally from $8.00 to $16.00. The one that stuck out was the near fine copy of The She-Devil for a whopping $40.00! I know  that book had a smaller print run but I have found copies in used bookstores in the past. Is it that rare? I remember seeing it often enough back in 1983 in bookstores and even in some drug stores. Eide’s– the venerable punk rock record/comic book/book store in downtown Pittsbugh had a copy on the shelves through most of the 80s it seemed. Maybe distribution was good for my area. I can see a book that never hit the bookshelves (The Valley So Low and Other Stories by Manly Wade Wellman comes to mind-a book I got luckily at the time). Other book dealers must have She-Devil priced in a similar range. An Ace paperback can’t be that rare even if it had a small print run.

Posted in Popular Culture |

REH Poetry Throwdown!

Posted by Official Editor Bill "Indy" Cavalier on 19th April 2008

Robert E. Howard Days presents:

 The First Annual ROBERT E. HOWARD POETRY THROWDOWN!!!

Join fellow Howard Days attendees in the Pavilion at the Howard House on Friday the 13th (of June), after Leo Grin’s Cimmerian Awards presentations, for the First Annual Howard Days Poetry Throwdown.

Bring your Howard poetry and engage yourself in some poetry readings, or just listen to the entertainment that will demonstrate why Robert E. Howard’s poetry screams to be read aloud! And this all takes place in REH’s back yard! What better way to honor Howard’s legacy than by speaking his words outside the very window where they were written?! It doesn’t get much better than that!

Here’s what other poets are saying about Robert E. Howard’s poetry:

Walt Whitman, American Poet Emeritus: “Never heard of him. Besides, I’m dead.”  

Allen Ginsburg, Neal Cassady, Jack Kerouac, William S. Burroughs, noted “Beat” poets: “Ol’ Two-Gun regularly kicks our collective asses when we have our own poetry throwdowns up on Crom’s mountain. He is, like, groovy, man!”  

Muhammad Ali, Pugilist and Poet: “Next to me, Bob Howard is the Greatest!”  

OPEN TO ALL – JUST GET UP AND READ! There may or may not be prizes involved in a number of categories we have yet to make up (Hey, Barbara Barrett just put this good idea out there, so I’m making up the rest of it as I go…) But start getting those vocal chords in shape – you want to be heard over the roar of the trucks on Highway 36!

Note: Some of REH’s poems may not be appropriate for women & children or the faint of heart, so please plan accordingly. REH Days assusmes no responsibility for any injuries incurred during the reading of REH poetry. And, as always, please – No Wagering! (Unless The Skipper or Barbara give you really good odds!)

SEE (AND LISTEN TO) YOU THERE!

Posted in Howard's Writing, REH Days |

Donald Wandrei Centennial

Posted by Morgan Holmes on 19th April 2008

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 April 20th is the 100th birthday for Donald Wandrei. Some of you don’t know who he is. Wandrei is a very important person in the scheme of things we hold important. Donald A. Wandrei (1908-1987) hailed from St. Paul, Minnesota. He had fourteen stories in Weird Tales, another sixteen in Astounding Stories, plus a few in other magazines. Here is why he is important:

1. As a young man, he started corresponding with H. P. Lovecraft. He was the first writer to take Lovecraft’s cosmic ideas and apply them to his own fiction. Lovecraft was writing a sort of cosmic horror, Wandrei applied it to science fiction. Wandrei’s “The Red Brain” beat Lovecraft’s “The Call of Cthulhu” by a few months, though by no fault of Lovecraft. Farnsworth Wright was hesitant to run Lovecraft’s story. Wandrei personally made the case for “The Call of Cthulhu” telling Wright that Lovecraft may look for other magazines to submit stories to. Wandrei’s visit with Wright worked. Frank Belknap Long, Clark Ashton Smith, and even Robert E. Howard tapped into Lovecraft’s cosmicism. Wandrei was the first and showed it could be done.

2. Wandrei was an accomplished poet. He was the first to write a series of sonnets for Weird Tales, “Sonnets of the Midnight Hours.” Lovecraft liked the idea so much, he embarked on his own, “Fungi From Yuggoth.” Robert E. Howard wrote his own series with “Sonnets out of Bedlam.” Wandrei was the first.

3. Donald Wandrei helped created modern science fiction. In late 1933, Astounding Stories was revived by Street & Smith under the editorship of F. Orlin Tremaine. The original Astounding had been a science fiction adventure pulp under Clayton Publications of low to mediocre quality. Clayton went under in early 1933 and Street & Smith bought Astounding Stories and Clues. Tremaine recruited Wandrei for both magazines, where he was a featured writer during the middle 1930s. His story “Colossus” was the first “thought variant” story. Tremaine turned an inferior magazine into the leading science fiction publication and Donald Wandrei’s stories helped make that transition. A few years later, John W. Campbell took over as editor and Astounding Stories became Astounding Science Fiction. Campbell discovered Robert Heinlein, Lester del Rey, L. Sprague de Camp, George O. Smith, A. E. Van Vogt etc. He also discovered Isaac Asimov, though he was not the first to publish him. No Wandrei to help revive Astounding Stories, no modern science fiction.

4. Donald Wandrei helped create Arkham House with August Derleth to preserve H. P. Lovecraft. Along the way Arkham House published Robert E. Howard’s first collection garnered from Weird TalesSkull-Face and Others. I will say that the Arkham House method is still the one to follow. The books were well made, easy to handle, easy on the eye in layout and font. The cover art was generally good but not overwrought. The focus was on getting the fiction into the hands of the reader and have it as a pleasurable experience. Some small press operations would be wise to take heed today.

5. Wandrei did much of the work on Lovecraft’s Letters.  Lovecraft studies would be nowhere without those letters. We wouldn’t have books collecting letters of Robert E. Howard, Clark Ashton Smith etc if it was not for this pioneering work.

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Robert E. Howard had a high regard for Donald Wandrei’s fiction and poetry. He mentioned him as one of the few writers of science fiction that he liked. Howard loved Wandrei’s poem “The Little Gods Wait.” Wandrei had written to Howard probably in 1932. Howard wrote a short letter to Wandrei in February 1933 expressing his admiration for Wandrei’s story “The Lives of Alfred Kramer” (most popular story in December 1932 issue of Weird Tales where “Phoenix on the Sword” appeared). It  appears that Wandrei had urged Howard to make a trip East to meet up with him and probably Lovecraft. One can only wonder what would have happened if Howard had taken up Wandrei’s suggestion. 

I exchanged some letters with Wandrei during the 1980s. He was long past his fiction writing phase but he may still have been writing some poetry in his last years. He had a reputation for strong opinions. My own take is he didn’t suffer fools lightly. Last year, on a discussion group, a now departed editor of the modern Weird Tales referred to Wandrei as a “hack.” He did write some dud stories, all writers do. How many writers manage to sell to Esquire at the same time Hemingway was in that magazine? Wandrei had three stories in Esquire. I am not sure if branding a writer who has sold to Esquire in its glory days as a hack will hold up as an accurate assessment.  Donald Wandrei’s fiction remains a favorite of mine to return to periodically. He had incredible command of language that was poetic and he used language correctly. In that regard, he may have been the best writer in Weird Tales. Don’t take my word for it, order yourself a copy of Colossus and Don’t Dream make your own decision.

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Posted in People |

Charles Saunders Returns!

Posted by Morgan Holmes on 14th April 2008

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I received an e-mail from Charles Saunders on his latest book. Dossouye collects the adventures of a women warrior set in Saunders’ fantasticated Africa–Nyumbani. The original stories go back over twenty-five years in anthologies such as Amazons! and Sword and the Sorceress. Charles de Lint was able to put together his own collection, Into the Green, from stories that appeared in those same anthologies about fifteen years ago. Here is the perfect companion book.

The Dossouye stories are full of action and realistic in their own way. No Barbie princess turned swordstress amazon here. Dossouye is a hard-bitten soldier from a corp of amazons in the nation of Dahomey based on real history.

You can order this book at www.stores.lulu.com/dossouye. This is a Sword and Soul Media presentation.

Posted in People, news |

Post Oaks and Sand Roughs

Posted by Morgan Holmes on 10th April 2008

Just recently, a former member of REHupa finally got a computer and online. He asked me about finding a copy of Post Oaks and Sand Roughs for a friend of his.

I mentioned this to members and former members of REHupa. Jim Keegan did a check and found there are no copies for sale- not on E-bay, Abebooks, Bookfinder, Addall etc. This book may be one of the hardest of all Robert E. Howard books to find right now.

I pulled out my copy to refresh my memory.  Donald Grant published it in 1990. The novel itself is 161 pages and Glenn Lord supplied another fourteen pages of appendix material. This book is invaluable in giving a window into the frame of mind of Robert E. Howard in the middle 1920s.

I was not able to find what the print run from Donald Grant was. The cover is really quite hideous. Anyway, the stock of Robert E. Howard just keeps going up. Time for the Robert E. Howard Foundation to get this one back into print.

Posted in Howard's Writing |