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Tales of Conan

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Language
  
English

Publication date
  
1955

Pages
  
219 pp

Preceded by
  
The Return of Conan

Cover artist
  
Ed Emshwiller

4.1/5
Goodreads

Country
  
United States

Series
  
Conan the Barbarian

Media type
  
Print (Hardback)

Originally published
  
1955

Publisher
  
Gnome Press

Tales of Conan httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediaenthumb3

Authors
  
Robert E. Howard, L. Sprague de Camp

Genres
  
Fantasy, Short story, Sword and sorcery, Speculative fiction

Similar
  
L Sprague de Camp books, Conan Universe books, Sword and sorcery books

Tales of Conan is a 1955 collection of four fantasy short stories written by Robert E. Howard and L. Sprague de Camp featuring Howard's seminal sword and sorcery hero Conan the Barbarian. The tales as originally written by Howard were adventure yarns mostly set in the Middle Ages; they were rewritten as Conan stories by de Camp, who also added the fantastic element. Three of the stories also appeared in the fantasy magazine Fantastic Universe, two of them before publication of the collection and the other one after. The book has also been translated into Japanese. The collection never saw publication in paperback; instead, its component stories were split up and distributed among other "Conan" collections. "The Flame Knife" was later also published as an independent paperback.

Contents

Chronologically, the four short stories collected as Tales of Conan represent an add-on to Gnome's Conan series, coming between stories published in the remaining volumes. The first "tale" would fall within the collection The Coming of Conan, the second between that volume and the collection Conan the Barbarian, the third within Conan the Barbarian, and the fourth between that volume and the collection The Sword of Conan.

Contents

  • "Introduction" (P. Schuyler Miller)
  • "Ghostly Note" (L. Sprague de Camp)
  • "The Blood-Stained God"
  • "Hawks Over Shem"
  • "The Road of the Eagles"
  • "The Flame-Knife"
  • Reception

    Galaxy reviewer Floyd C. Gale found the collection inferior to de Camp's own The Tritonian Ring, where de Camp "outConaned Conan." Anthony Boucher noted that Miller's introduction "is so spiritedly infectious that one almost succumbs to his enthusiasm . . . until one tries to read the four long stories."

    References

    Tales of Conan Wikipedia


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