Lord of Samarcand and Other Adventure Tales of the Old Orient (The Works of Robert E. Howard)
For five centuries of Crusades, European armies of believers, fanatics, and mercenaries warred with the followers of the Prophet for control of Asia Minor and Palestine. From Jerusalem to Vienna, the frontier between West and East saw battle and bloodshed, treachery and butchery on a scale hitherto unknown and unimagined. The pageantry of medieval knighthood, the exoticism of the Orient, the ferocity of the invaders from the steppes, the mysteries of the seraglio, the rise and fall of great d... (show more)
For five centuries of Crusades, European armies of believers, fanatics, and mercenaries warred with the followers of the Prophet for control of Asia Minor and Palestine. From Jerusalem to Vienna, the frontier between West and East saw battle and bloodshed, treachery and butchery on a scale hitherto unknown and unimagined. The pageantry of medieval knighthood, the exoticism of the Orient, the ferocity of the invaders from the steppes, the mysteries of the seraglio, the rise and fall of great dynasties—these provided a real historical backdrop for some of Robert E. Howard’s greatest fiction. This volume contains the complete Oriental stories by the creator of Conan the Barbarian and Solomon Kane. Some were published in Farnsworth Wright’s Oriental Stories between 1930 and 1934; others were left unpublished and are printed here in authoritative texts based on the author’s surviving typescripts; and still others, left unfinished at his death, are presented as suggestive evidence of the work he had yet to do. As this collection attests, no one else writes action stories with Howard’s fast-paced intensity or brooding moral outlook. Here, the fates of empires rest on the swords of exiles, vagabonds, and renegades; whether civilization will be annihilated by religious zealots or by bloodthirsty barbarians, who is to say? (show less)
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The stories were repetitive in themes, but that is to expect, as this wasnt a collection of the best of howard, rather all his oriental stories. These stories were different to his more famous ones as they were based on medieval battles and did not have any supernatural elements. Its still worth a read for fans of Howard, particularly the story Shadow of the vulture that introduced another well known character Red Sonya.
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REH is not at his best in these yarns. The stories in this book are full of cliches, both storytelling and descriptive, and REH also repeats himself quite often. I lost count of how many men were "giants" and "hawk-faced", etc, etc. It seems that when writing these, he was still learning and striving towards the brilliance that we see in Solomon Kane and Conan stories. Still, these tales are full of energy and action and I might have enjoyed them more if I didn't know that... (show more)
REH is not at his best in these yarns. The stories in this book are full of cliches, both storytelling and descriptive, and REH also repeats himself quite often. I lost count of how many men were "giants" and "hawk-faced", etc, etc. It seems that when writing these, he was still learning and striving towards the brilliance that we see in Solomon Kane and Conan stories. Still, these tales are full of energy and action and I might have enjoyed them more if I didn't know that REH wrote so much better later on. (show less)
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