I never get tired of reading about Robert E. Howard and his work. I’ve read several biographies and books about his writings and countless articles on those subjects. So I am definitely the target audience for ROBERT E. HOWARD: THE LIFE AND TIMES OF A TEXAS AUTHOR, the massive new REH biography by Willard M. Oliver published by the University of North Texas Press in hardcover and e-book editions. (It doesn’t hurt that I’m a graduate of UNT, or as it was known when I went there, North Texas State University.)
I really enjoyed the other biographies I read, even the deeply flawed DARK
VALLEY DESTINY by L. Sprague de Camp, Catherine Crook de Camp, and Jane
Whittington Griffin. It was the first real REH bio, and a friend of mine helped
the de Camps with the research. Plus we didn’t really know at the time about
much of the stuff they got wrong or misinterpreted. Anyway, before I wander off
in the weeds . . .
ROBERT E. HOWARD: THE LIFE AND TIMES OF A TEXAS AUTHOR will likely be
considered the definitive REH biography from now on, since it’s exhaustively
researched, extensively footnoted, and brings together in one place all the
information that’s available about Howard’s life, plus adding some things that
I’ve never come across before in nearly 60 years of being a Howard fan.
Academically, I just don’t see how anybody could ever top this volume.
However, I’m not an academic. I’m a guy who likes Howard’s yarns and have ever
since I spotted the Lancer edition of CONAN THE USURPER in Barber’s Bookstore
in downtown Fort Worth lo, those many years ago. And I feel a strong kinship
toward Howard dating back to the moment I opened that paperback with its purple-edged
pages and read in L. Sprague de Camp’s introduction that Howard was from Cross
Plains, Texas—a town I’d heard of all my life because both sides of my family
come from the same general area in west central Texas. I mean, here was a guy
from a little town in Texas who forged a career as a writer when everything
seemed stacked against him, and that was exactly what I wanted to do!
So what I look for in a biography of Robert E. Howard is a sense of who he was,
what he did, how and why he did it (as much as it’s possible to figure out the
why), and the same feeling I get when I stand in the Howard House in Cross
Plains and look into that tiny room where Bob lived and worked . . . and this
new book delivers on that. It delivers on that magnificently, in prose that’s
clear, straightforward, sometimes poignant, and very compelling.
I haven’t been to Cross Plains for Howard Days in a number of years and I’ve
never met or been in contact with Will Oliver, so I say this not as a friend of
his but as a long-time reader and fan of Howard’s work.
ROBERT E. HOWARD: THE LIFE AND TIMES OF A TEXAS AUTHOR is the best book I’ve
read this year. For Howard fans, I give it my highest recommendation.
2 comments:
Just into the Brownwood section , this looks like it's really well researched and has been excellent so far.
The thing about Howard is that the same thing that makes his biography compelling makes him difficult to write about. That is he's such a contradictory character.
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