| Now in trade paperback! Moon of Skulls, by Robert E. Howard
(The Weird Works of Robert E. Howard, vol. 2)
Edited by Paul Herman
Published by Wildside Press
216 pages, hardcover, $35.00 (limited to 1200 copies)
Contents
The Gothic Orient (introduction) by Mark Finn
Skull-Face
Dead Man's Hate
The Fearsome Touch of Death
A Song out of Midian
Shadows on the Road
The Moon of Skulls
The Hills of the Dead
Black Chant Imperial
The Voice of El-Lil
Robert E. Howard's writing career began in 1924, and by 1929, he was
selling steadily to different markets. However, Weird Tales continued to be
his most dependable, if not financially reliable, market. In the pages of
"the unique magazine," Howard had plenty of room to explore ideas and cross
genre barriers that he may not have been able to with other pulp fiction
magazines.
Continuing the collection of Howard's fiction and poetry in order of
publication, Volume Two of The Weird Works of Robert E. Howard picks up
where Volume One left off-at one of the most startling and controversial
Howard stories of all: "Skull-Face!" A potent combination of gothic themes
and oriental mystique, "Skull-Face" was the first novella Howard sold, and
in many ways, is a key to understanding the rest of Howard's canon. A
detailed, complicated plot, a compelling cast of characters, and a
collision of themes and ideas make "Skull-Face" required reading for Howard
fans.
The Moon of Skulls collects Robert E. Howard's fiction and prose published
in Weird Tales Magazine from October 1929 to November 1930, plus one from
Oriental Stories. These works represent literary stepping-stones to
Howard's infamous Cthulhu mythos stories and his most famous character of
all -- Conan the Cimmerian -- and ably demonstrate that each of Howard's stories
improved and added to his formidable skills as a master of fantasy and
adventure. |