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/lit/ - Literature


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File: 174 KB, 308x450, conan.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
7555861 No.7555861 [Reply] [Original]

What do you guys think is the best Conan story? At least among Howard's originals.

I just started reading them and I'm pleasantly surprised. The world is realistic, vivid, and interesting; the characters and their motivations are well thought out, Conan isn't just a stupid killing machine as he is often depicted, and the stories provoke some interesting questions relating to barbarism and society.

>> No.7555951

I forget the name, but its the one were at the end Conan chases some evil wizard down and decapitates him and the head flies off with the body chasing it.

>> No.7556072
File: 47 KB, 458x658, pooloftheblackone3.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
7556072

"The Pool of the Black One" has been my favorite ever since I read it. It goes Full Lovecraft and actually has Conan sail to an entire other realm populated by inhuman monsters. Plus he kills a man just so he can steal his woman. It's fantastic.

>> No.7556131

The Scarlet Citadel out of what I've read.

>> No.7556233

>>7556072

I really like how many of the stories aren't as formulaic as you'd expect. Quite a few of them deviate from the standard recipe.

Most of the formulaic ones only existed because Weird Tales often wouldn't purchase the ones that were too different, Weird Tales being Howard's primary source of income.

>> No.7556256

>>7555861
>provoke some interesting questions relating to barbarism and society.
I think he was also using that to make a comment between rural folk vs city folk.

>> No.7556421
File: 589 KB, 600x862, image.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
7556421

>>7556131

This, while not OP's criteria. The sheer amount of violence is superb. But the overall story is quite enjoyable.

>> No.7556432
File: 68 KB, 500x760, tonydz01.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
7556432

>>7555861
I always liked Red Nails and Beyond the Black River the most. But you're right OP, Howard was pretty much convinced that most of history was a steady movement from barbarism to civilization, with certain civilizations regressing, or failing to progress at all.

The Tower of the Elephant is my second-favorite of all the Conan stories. How everything worked out was just so satisfying.

>> No.7556700

>>7556256

This is true. He experienced firsthand that with a sudden surge in population comes a surge in crime.

>> No.7556727

>>7556432
>But you're right OP, Howard was pretty much convinced that most of history was a steady movement from barbarism to civilization, with certain civilizations regressing, or failing to progress at all.

He wrote in a letter to H.P. Lovecraft that he thought barbarism was the natural state of man and that all societies would eventually collapse. It's kind of similar to the communist viewpoint on capitalism, not that Howard was a communist.

Lovecraft's view was different: he thought society/civilization was the end goal of humanity and that humanity would never regress.

I think that both of their respective viewpoints can both be seen in their works.

>> No.7556737

>>7556421

That's some pretty impressive art. I've never really read comic books but I can definitely see Conan working well in the medium.

>> No.7556742

>>7556432

It's funny how his arm is almost as big as his waist in this picture.

I guess it's not that farfetched, considering Arnold's arm size at his peak was 22 inches and his waist size was only 30 or 31 inches or something like that.

>> No.7556746

The Tower of the Elephant.

>> No.7557406

Do any of you guys know a good collection of the Howard stories?

>> No.7557477

>>7557406
Howard didn't really write that many before he checked out of this world. I think only like 20?

The complete chronicles of conan is good enough.