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The Nemedian Chroniclers #7 - Robert-E-Howard

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THE SASSER ZINES, PART ONE<br />

REHEAPA<br />

By Lee A. Breakiron<br />

<strong>The</strong> first issue of the fanzine REH: Two-Gun Raconteur appeared in the spring of 1976, a<br />

typed mimeograph of 44 pages, in an 8½×11-inch, side-stapled format with black-and-white<br />

contents, as all the issues would have, with a cover price of $2.50 in a print run of 350. It was<br />

published by the Black Coast Press of Houston resident Damon C. Sasser, who had been a fan of<br />

<strong>Robert</strong> E. <strong>Howard</strong> ever since a bookstore clerk handed him a copy of the Lancer paperback <strong>The</strong><br />

Hour of the Dragon when Sasser was looking for Tarzan books in the summer of 1971. In his<br />

editorial, Sasser says his zine is ―aimed at the newcomer to <strong>Howard</strong>: those of you who have just<br />

become aware of REH through Marvel Comics and the Zebra paperbacks. … Hopefully, REH:<br />

Two-Gun Raconteur will bring about a better understanding of <strong>Robert</strong> E. <strong>Howard</strong> and his<br />

writings.‖ [1]<br />

Born in 1955, Sasser would spend by far most of his life in Texas. At the time, he was an<br />

electrician by trade whose chief interests were ―comic collecting, old movies and serials, pulp<br />

reprints, and popular fiction.‖ After a year and half of college, he went to work in sales, selling<br />

everything from insurance to custom clothing to pagers, until 1994. <strong>The</strong>n he went back to school<br />

at night, obtained a Paralegal Certificate, and went to work for the El Paso Corporation, where he<br />

has been for the past 15 years.<br />

―<strong>The</strong> role of fandom,‖ as he saw it, ―is primarily entertainment for fans. Of course, some<br />

people make their living of it, which is cool. Fandom is also an excellent place for writers and<br />

artists to get their start.‖ He didn‘t consider himself in competition with other fanzinists.<br />

―Competition is for big business and such. TGR is merely a pastime or hobby for me. Of course,<br />

anyone who publishes REH material is [vying] for the fan dollar, but there seems to be enough<br />

fans to support us all. ... My main reason for doing TGR is my love for <strong>Howard</strong>‘s fiction. I also<br />

felt I could contribute something to REH fandom and wanted to contact other people with an<br />

interest in <strong>Howard</strong>.‖ [2]<br />

Later, he was to say ―When I was just starting out 30 years ago, several <strong>Howard</strong> fanzine<br />

editors tried to dissuade [me] from launching a <strong>Howard</strong> ‗zine, saying that everything about<br />

1


REHEAPA<br />

<strong>Howard</strong> and the topic in general had been exhausted(!). Needless to say, I didn‘t agree with that<br />

line of reasoning and forged ahead with the publication of TGR. Of course, all those other<br />

fanzine editors and publishers (with the exception of McHaney) moved away from <strong>Howard</strong> and<br />

on to other interests.‖ [3, p. 2] From the start, he regarded appropriate, quality artwork as an<br />

essential component of any fanzine, and has regularly commissioned art for that purpose.<br />

James Bozarth provides the front and back cover art for REH: TGR #1, as well as a five-page<br />

portfolio illustrating <strong>The</strong> Dark Man. Sasser writes the first article, ―God‘s Angry Man,‖ on the<br />

2<br />

\<br />

REH: TGR #1


REHEAPA<br />

world‘s first Sword & Sorcery hero, Solomon Kane, the only one of REH‘s heroes who lived in a<br />

real historical era. Sasser lists the books, magazine, and comics that have featured Kane, noting<br />

that Kane ―has been treated well in the comics‖ [4, p. 7]. Sasser sketches the Puritan‘s brooding<br />

personality and peripatetic life, giving detailed summaries of each of the stories and a glossary of<br />

their characters.<br />

Next, in the first of three articles, Sasser‘s aunt and professional astrologer Elaine Kuhns<br />

assays REH‘s horoscope, looking for heavenly clues about his life and tragic death. Her attempt<br />

sheds no more light on the subject than astrology ever has on anything, considering the practice<br />

is a pseudoscientific relic of a superstitious past, entailing not only no demonstrated, but no<br />

possible, cause and effect on human character or affairs. She concedes ―stars impel—they do not<br />

compel‖ [5, p. 26], yet we are supposed to believe that they explain <strong>Howard</strong>‘s creativity,<br />

determination, moodiness, and loyalty.<br />

Wayne Warfield, editor of the fanzine Cross Plains that had run its course over the previous<br />

2 years, contributes an insightful overview of REH‘s life and writings. ―<strong>Howard</strong> was complex,‖<br />

he says. ―An accomplished boxer, hot tempered, with violent likes and dislikes, moody and<br />

unconventional. … <strong>Howard</strong> thought of himself as a failure, as a writer and as a man. It is very<br />

possible that he was a victim of society.‖ As he discussed in his Fantasy Crossroads #4/5 article<br />

―REH: Misfit,‖ ―<strong>Howard</strong>‘s various quirks helped to make his work so outstanding.‖ Warfield<br />

thinks REH‘s horror stories were superb and greatly underrated. ―Everything REH wrote was an<br />

extension of his own personal interests and fantasies; all of which he knew well,‖ unlike many of<br />

his imitators. ―Above all else, <strong>Robert</strong> E. <strong>Howard</strong> is remembered and loved as the man who<br />

combined heroic adventure, supernatural horror and the imaginary world fantasies to form a new<br />

genre. A genre, I am happy to say, which shows no sign of age or lack of talent. For this we<br />

owe ‗Two-Gun Bob‘ a great debt.‖ [6]<br />

In the next article, Byron Roark, editor of the fanzine REH: Lone Star Fictioneer, reviews<br />

the first collectors editions of REH stories, namely those by Donald M. Grant. He scores them as<br />

being grossly overpriced. ―WHAT COMES NEXT AFTER FIFTEEN BUCKS?‖ [7, p. 34] If<br />

he only knew …<br />

Bill Wallace then submits a commentary on REH‘s story ―<strong>The</strong> Horror from the Mound,‖<br />

praising it for, among other things, its vivid sense of locale.<br />

Sasser has the final word in a review of the Marvel Comic adventures of Red Sonja, based on<br />

the REH character Red Sonya from ―<strong>The</strong> Shadow of the Vulture.‖ He criticizes the Marvel<br />

stories, after starting well, as being unrealistic, not very <strong>Howard</strong>ian, and increasingly dull.<br />

<strong>The</strong> issue is rounded out, as all succeeding issues would be, by reviews and news about<br />

current and forthcoming REH publications. <strong>The</strong> reviews are of Marvel REH comics and the<br />

news is from REH scholar Glenn Lord, as it would be throughout the first four issues. Though<br />

flawed by typos and limited by its mimeographic format, REH: TGR #1 was a promising start.<br />

Charles Melvin reviews it in his REHupa zine [8].<br />

3


REHEAPA<br />

<strong>The</strong> second issue, dated summer 1976, is a definite step up in production quality, still typed<br />

but offset-printed (as issues #3 and #4 would be) on better paper stock and saddle-stapled (as all<br />

the rest of the issues would be). Selling for a cheaper $1.75 a copy in a print run of 500, it runs<br />

36 pages plus covers, the latter by Gene Day (front), Arnie Fenner (back), and David Parsons<br />

(both insides). Interior artwork is supplied by John Jamilkowsli and Bozarth. In his editorial,<br />

Sasser calls the first issue a ―smashing success‖ and that he was surprised at how well it was<br />

received [9]. <strong>The</strong>re appear photos of himself and some of his contributors, as well as the first<br />

letters of comment, including ones from Warfield, Cross Plains publisher George Hamilton, and<br />

4<br />

REH: TGR #2


REHEAPA<br />

Fantasy Newsletter editor Paul C. Allen. Sentiment in the letters tends to run against Kuhns‘s<br />

astrological article, Roark‘s criticism of Grant, and Bozarth‘s art.<br />

Following this is a letter from REH to Clark Ashton Smith praising Smith‘s book <strong>The</strong> Double<br />

Shadow (Clark Ashton Smith, 1933), contributed by Lord. <strong>The</strong>n, after some fluff about fandom<br />

by Parsons, Warfield weighs in with a knowledgeable article on the historical Celts. He notes<br />

that REH‘s Celtic history was not entirely factual, but serves as a fascinating backdrop to many<br />

of his best tales.<br />

Next come a portfolio of art by Ken Raney, illustrating ―<strong>The</strong> Pool of the Black one,‖ and the<br />

second part of Kuhns‘s series on REH‘s horoscope. Despite the fact that she does not know the<br />

time of REH‘s birth with any exactness (supposedly an essential datum in such analyses), she<br />

claims to be able to infer it from his general appearance and physique, and then uses it to predict<br />

that his driving forces were power, creativity, sex, death, retribution, regeneration, obsession,<br />

and determination. Can you say ―fudge factor‖?<br />

REHupan Steve Smolins then gives us a glimpse of how REH collecting was carried out in<br />

the days long before the Internet. It involved a lot of persistence, letter writing, convention<br />

attendance, and trading up.<br />

<strong>The</strong> issue closes with a funny story by Sasser and book and art reviews by Sasser and<br />

Parsons.<br />

Sasser joined REHupa briefly in September, 1976, producing one zine, Black Lotus #1, in<br />

which he states, ―About all I get out of this zine game is the knowledge that someone is enjoying<br />

what I‘m putting out.‖ [10] As briefly, he also joined <strong>The</strong> Hyperborian League. But he had to<br />

leave both fan organizations because he had ―too many irons in the fire.‖ [11]<br />

REH: TGR #3 was published in the winter of 1976, again priced at $1.75 each in a print run<br />

of 500. It is a further improvement over the preceding issue in being better typed, having fancy<br />

section logos, and utilizing heavier cover stock. Running 40 pages plus covers, it features cover<br />

art by Raney (front), Steve Fabian (back), and Don Herron (both insides), and interior art by<br />

Parsons, Jamilkowski, Tom Foster, Fenner, and Day, the latter submitting a four-page portfolio<br />

illustrating ―<strong>The</strong> Moon of Skulls.‖ #3 would be the fastest selling of all Sasser‘s zines.<br />

In his editorial, Sasser takes Gary Hoppenstand to task for calling REH a hack in an article in<br />

the magazine Starwind #2 comparing Conan and Karl Edward Wagner‘s character Kane [12].<br />

<strong>The</strong> letters of comment includes one by Allen.<br />

<strong>The</strong> first REH story to appear in REH: TGR is next, namely the western ―<strong>The</strong> Devil‘s Joker,‖<br />

furnished, as always, by Lord. Following it is the first of two articles on ―<strong>Robert</strong> E. <strong>Howard</strong> and<br />

the Ring‖ by Dennis McHaney, editor of the fanzine <strong>The</strong> <strong>Howard</strong> Review, though the second<br />

installment never appeared. McHaney covers the history of the humorous boxing stories starring<br />

Steve Costigan, Dennis Dorgan, and Kid Allison. ―As pure fun,‖ he says, ―they are a joy to<br />

5


REHEAPA<br />

read.‖ [13, p. 17] He criticizes the FAX hardback <strong>The</strong> Incredible Adventures of Dennis Dorgan<br />

(1974) as being overpriced and poorly illustrated (by Tom Foster).<br />

<strong>The</strong> high point of the issue is ―Conan vs. Conantics,‖ a watershed article in REH literary<br />

criticism, by Don Herron, who would go on to edit the milestone publications <strong>The</strong> Dark<br />

6<br />

REH: TGR #3


REHEAPA<br />

Barbarian: <strong>The</strong> Writings of <strong>Robert</strong> E. <strong>Howard</strong>; A Critical Anthology (Greenwood, 1984) and <strong>The</strong><br />

Barbaric Triumph: A Critical Anthology on the Writings of <strong>Robert</strong> E. <strong>Howard</strong> (Wildside, 2004).<br />

―Conantics‖ was a term coined by writer and editor Donald Wandrei to describe some of the high<br />

jinks surrounding the REH character Conan that involved various parties with vested interests.<br />

Herron adopted it to designate imitation Conans by pasticheurs. Roark had condemned L.<br />

Sprague de Camp and Lin Carter for their exploitive Conan pastiches and posthumous<br />

collaborations in REH: Lone Star Fictioneer #3 the previous year [14], but Herron goes into<br />

greater detail substantiating the inconsistencies and substandard writing which the two authors<br />

were guilty of as they imitated or rewrote REH stories in order to impose their chronology onto a<br />

unified saga that they could then profit from by extending. Herron had the advantage of seeing<br />

Roark and Fenner‘s interview of de Camp in the final issue of REH: LSF [15], as well as a letter<br />

therein from de Camp [16], and so was able to quote de Camp‘s deprecating and contradictory<br />

statements about REH and his fiction. Herron goes on to point out glaring inconsistencies of<br />

Carter and de Camp‘s plotting and characterization compared with REH‘s, such as their Conan‘s<br />

invocation of his god Crom, whom Conan would have known was oblivious to man‘s prayers,<br />

and Conan‘s logical and reserved manner, which stood in stark contrast with his established<br />

impulsive instincts and outspokenness.<br />

This use of planning and logic may be the way in which they attempt to<br />

compensate for their lack of narrative drive, but it simply does not work within<br />

the framework of Conan‘s character and it is certainly not an effective substitute<br />

for REH‘s greater ability to write gripping tales. … In the considered opinion of<br />

this writer, all the extra de Camp-Carter wordage added to <strong>Robert</strong> E. <strong>Howard</strong>‘s<br />

own and mixed in with his series in the Conan paperback books has done more<br />

damage to REH‘s literary reputation than all the poor tales that <strong>Howard</strong> wrote<br />

himself. … <strong>The</strong> Conantics stories are miserable additions to sword and sorcery<br />

fiction by any standard of decent writing and are certainly unworthy to be in the<br />

same books with fiction by <strong>Robert</strong> E. <strong>Howard</strong>, who is unquestionably one of the<br />

very best writers of sword and sorcery [17, pp. 27, 30, & 31].<br />

Next, Charles Melvin discusses the value of out-of-print REH hardbacks and how best to<br />

procure them. <strong>The</strong>n Smolins reviews some REH hardbacks and Mike Resnick‘s Official Guide<br />

to the Fantastics (House of Collectibles, 1976).<br />

By the fourth issue, Sasser was billing REH: TGR as ―the definitive <strong>Howard</strong> fanzine,‖ as it<br />

was arguably becoming. #4, dated summer 1977, ran 40 pages plus covers and was priced at<br />

$2.00 each, in a print run of 650. <strong>The</strong> front cover (tinted copper) and both inside covers are by<br />

Fabian, and the back cover is by Bozarth. Interior art is provided by Herron (a four-page<br />

portfolio illustrating ―Kings of the Night.‖), Clyde Caldwell, Marcus Boas, Bozarth, Stephen<br />

Riley, and Fenner. In his editorial, Sasser denounces the new Ace editions of Conan paperbacks<br />

as quickie rip-offs paying royalties to no one.<br />

<strong>The</strong> first two letterhacks (the second being Allen) generally agree with Herron‘s polemic in<br />

the previous issue. <strong>The</strong> third, however, is none other than de Camp, who responds to Herron by<br />

saying that REH must have had a rather complete chronology for the Conan stories in mind, and<br />

that REH‘s Conan was as crafty in places as his and Carter‘s was. De Camp contests or<br />

7


REHEAPA<br />

dismisses all Herron‘s other points. Next up is Herron himself, who, having been allowed to see<br />

de Camp‘s response, quotes REH as saying he had no detailed chronology in mind for Conan,<br />

and points out that he (Herron) had never said Conan was stupid, but in fact had called Conan<br />

crafty. He said he wrote his essay to alert readers to the ―huge gap in style and quality between<br />

the work of <strong>Howard</strong> and his ‗posthumous collaborators.‘‖ [18]<br />

8<br />

REH: TGR #4


REHEAPA<br />

One humorous bone of contention between the two concerned Herron‘s knocking de Camp<br />

for his statement in his pastiche ―<strong>The</strong> Hall of the Dead‖ that had Conan thinking, ―If he could not<br />

outrun the slug, perhaps he could tire it.‖ Herron claims that is ―not logical; Conan cannot<br />

outrun the giant slug, but he hopes to tire it being able to outrun it!‖ [17, p. 26] De Camp replies,<br />

―One can indeed outrun an animal whose top speed is greater than one‘s own, if he has enough<br />

of a head start and can keep going until the pursuer tires. … Much the same happened to me in<br />

Uganda with a hippopotamus.‖ [19] Herron retorts that this could have been clearer with a more<br />

logically phrased sentence and closed the letter, in its original form, with ―Yours for faster<br />

hippos.‖ Sasser removed this closing in REH: TGR for reasons of space [20], but Herron<br />

restored it in a reprint of the article and letter [21]. De Camp indeed felt the article‘s impact; he<br />

would later say in letters that Herron‘s essay as written on a typewriter whose ribbon ―was<br />

dipped in acid.‖ [22]<br />

<strong>The</strong> next letter is by Loay Hall, who praises Herron‘s article for its ―lack of invectiveness,‖<br />

but defends de Camp and Carter‘s pastiches for filling fans‘ demands for more Conan stories<br />

[23]. <strong>The</strong> last commentator, Kevin Cook, calls the article the best feature Sasser had run yet.<br />

―Carter and de Camp have corrupted what REH was trying to accomplish in his Conan tales.<br />

Explaining every little detail and episode in Conan‘s life, especially in a non-<strong>Howard</strong>ian manner,<br />

makes the character lose some of his alluring magic and sense of wonder.‖ [24]<br />

<strong>The</strong> main features of the issue were two stories by REH. <strong>The</strong> first was ―Golden Hope<br />

Christmas‖ that had run in the Brownwood High School paper <strong>The</strong> Tattler when REH had<br />

attended there, and had been reprinted in Cross Plains #1. <strong>The</strong> second was the Turlogh O‘Brien<br />

fragment ―<strong>The</strong> Dane came in …,‖ which Sasser follows with a commentary on the character and<br />

summaries of the five stories (one unfinished) starring O‘Brien, whom Sasser declares is a hero<br />

equal to Conan, Kull, Kane, and Bran Mak Morn, but little known because no single book had<br />

been published containing all his stories. ―In the O‘Brien tales there is a somber mood in which<br />

he thrives and he is in his element in these dark, brooding word-pictures <strong>Howard</strong> has painted so<br />

well. Whether Turlogh is in a beserker rage slaying men like a bloody reaper of Death, or if he is<br />

waxing philosophically on the fates of man and civilization, he is a powerful character that seems<br />

to leap off the page and into full-blown life.‖ [25, p. 14]<br />

Kuhns brings her astrological series mercifully to an end with a horoscope that seemingly<br />

predicts every aspect of REH‘s life and personality, and makes his suicide virtually inevitable.<br />

In fact, she strongly implies that she deduced his form of demise before she knew of it. If so,<br />

what else can one do but proclaim her a true prophet? She knows too much about astrology to be<br />

a dupe.<br />

Next, Bill Wallace fondly reminisces about the story ―Pigeons from Hell,‖ expressing<br />

admiration for its horrific atmosphere, but dismay at its weak title and racist language.<br />

Aside from a review by Riley, the issue is concluded by Roark, who reviews REH‘s westerns,<br />

whose quality made him suspect that, had REH lived, ―he would have made a lasting mark on<br />

the literary field writing about the legends and lore of his native southwest.‖ He thinks highly of<br />

―<strong>The</strong> Horror from the Mound‖ and the humorous yarns, though myopically not of ―Old<br />

Garfield‘s Heart‖ or most of REH‘s straight westerns. He says REH seemed to have hit his<br />

9


REHEAPA<br />

stride in the humorous tales, and ―mined a section of his personality that remains hidden in most<br />

of his other work. <strong>Howard</strong> had a fine sense of the absurd and seemed to externalize his own<br />

notions of the comedy of the human condition in these stories.‖ [26, p. 33]<br />

<strong>The</strong> next fanzine Sasser did was not REH: TGR #5, but a new one entitled <strong>The</strong> Chronicler of<br />

Cross Plains #1 over a year later in the fall of 1978. In his editorial, he explains that he had<br />

10<br />

<strong>The</strong> Chronicler<br />

of Cross Plains<br />

#1


REHEAPA<br />

almost given up his publishing business due to ―hassles, illnesses, family problems, and a host of<br />

other things,‖ and was finally only able to cope with life after meeting Alma, the lady who<br />

became his wife [27]. Salvaging material from an aborted zine called Skelos #1 and combining it<br />

with what had been intended for REH: TGR #5, he put together Chronicler, which he conceived<br />

of as being wider in scope that REH: TGR, dealing as it would with REH‘s fellow Weird Tales<br />

writers and newer Sword & Sorcery authors. And different it was, with a color cover by Raney,<br />

mostly smaller type, 52 offset-printed pages plus covers, and a price of $4.00, in a run of 1000<br />

copies. Fabian drew the back cover and Boas and Fred Bobb did the inside covers. <strong>The</strong> interior<br />

art was by Day, Raney (including all the logos and a four-page portfolio), Fabian, Fenner (a fivepage<br />

portfolio), Boas, Rick Corlett, and Greg Vander Leon.<br />

<strong>The</strong> issue features two REH stories, the sailor Steve Costigan yarn ―<strong>The</strong> Sign of the Snake‖<br />

and the horror story ―Casonetto‘s Last Song.‖ <strong>The</strong>se were followed by Lord‘s ―<strong>The</strong> Writing<br />

Game‖ recapping REH‘s publishing career, reprinted from REH: Lone Star Fictioneer #1.<br />

Sword & Soul master Charles R. Saunders appears with an adventure of his African character<br />

Imaro, ―Kibanda Ya Kufa,‖ and with an essay comparing Conan and Tarzan. Poems are<br />

presented by <strong>Robert</strong> Fester and Steve Eng (writing as John Bredon), as well as stories by<br />

Kenneth Huff and Jeffrey Goddin. Finally, Thomas Reid contributes an essay contrasting REH‘s<br />

and H. P. Lovecraft‘s protagonists and their own personal attitudes toward civilization. Reid‘s<br />

logic is flawed, though, when he argues that Lovecraft ―was not physically capable of<br />

developing‖ his thesis that man as a race is doomed. ―In this aspect he certainly was <strong>Howard</strong>‘s<br />

inferior.‖ [28, p. 47] What does either physicality or philosophy have to do with literary stature?<br />

And Reid‘s reflections about the world‘s reaction to Nazism sound pretty cynical.<br />

Unbeknown to Sasser, it would be another 25 years before he could do another issue of a zine.<br />

What happened? ―Life happened (raising a family, getting the kids through college, etc.),‖ he<br />

said, ―but I‘m back on track and here to stay!‖ [29] And indeed he would be, both as a publisher<br />

and a participant in fandom, for at least another 7 years (to date). He had vaulted from the first<br />

<strong>Howard</strong> Boom to the second, benefitting from and contributing to both.<br />

REH: TGR #5, ―the lost issue,‖ that almost came out in 1984, finally appeared in the winter of<br />

2003, running 32 pages plus covers in a print run of 250 and with a cover price of $9.50. It and<br />

all of Sasser‘s later zines were desktop-formatted and then given to a professional printing firm<br />

for copying, since the print runs were too small to justify offset-printing. #5 was in black and<br />

white with virtually all the content dating from the late 1970s. Fabian does the cover and a 4page<br />

Almuric portfolio, Raney the back cover, and Fenner the inside covers. <strong>The</strong> rest of the art<br />

is by Herron, Easley, Fabian, Bobb, Fenner, Day, and Vander Leon. <strong>The</strong>re would be no more<br />

letter columns until issue #12 (despite his offer, from <strong>#7</strong> on, to give a free issue to any<br />

letterhack), doubtless because of the advent of e-mail and message boards. Sasser had one of the<br />

latter himself for his Black Coast Press on Yahoo.com.<br />

<strong>The</strong> opening feature is the REH western ―A Horror in the Night,‖ which had first appeared in<br />

Cross Plains #3. Next, transsexual Jesse Amos Salmonson, by then known as author Jessica<br />

Amanda Salmonson, submits the article ―<strong>The</strong> Sins of Our Tastes, the Sins of Our Trade,‖<br />

reprinted from a sci-fi magazine, discussing what the objectives of heroic fantasy should be.<br />

―Heroic fantasy is, for me, a celebration of life‘s brief, transient joys and sorrows,‖ she says, and<br />

11


REHEAPA<br />

advises current writers to pursue their own unique vision of fantasy, rather than slavishly imitate<br />

masters of the past like REH [30, p. 10].<br />

Following this is a piece by Sasser on REH‘s unfinished pseudo-historical western ―Nekht<br />

Semerkeht,‖ in a version finished by Andrew Offutt. ―It‘s interesting to note,‖ Sasser states,<br />

―that near the end of his life <strong>Howard</strong> was not writing of some far off land (real or imagined), but<br />

of the Southwest—his own backyard.‖ [31, p. 13] He points out a passage that might give some<br />

insight into the emotional pain REH was experiencing:<br />

12<br />

REH: TGR #5


REHEAPA<br />

Oh, of course we are guided solely by reason, even when reason tells us it is<br />

better to die than to live! It is not the intellect we boast that bids us to live—and<br />

kill to live—but the blind unreasoning beast-instinct. [32, p. 21]<br />

When REH was writing about his protagonist de Guzman, Sasser says, ―<strong>The</strong> monster and<br />

demons he created were mere reflections of the ones that lived within his mind. Like de Guzman<br />

who won the battle but lost the war, <strong>Howard</strong> was no match for those horrible devil gods that<br />

lived in Tlasceltec and within himself.‖ [31, p. 31] (And I note ―Tlasceltec‖ is a near-anagram of<br />

<strong>The</strong> Last Celt.)<br />

Keith Taylor next explains how he and Offutt came to collaborate on their Cormac Mac Art<br />

pastiches When Death Birds Fly (Ace, 1980) and <strong>The</strong> Tower of Death (Ace, 1982). <strong>The</strong>n, as a<br />

homage to REH‘s funny boxing stories, Saunders offers one of his own, ―Fists of Cross Plains.‖<br />

Concluding the issue, Darrell Schweitzer asks ―Was <strong>Robert</strong> E. <strong>Howard</strong> a Hack?‖ He answers<br />

―sometimes,‖ pointing to REH‘s mediocre detective stories. He doesn‘t bother to examine how<br />

much better by far most of REH‘s other output is, though he finally concedes, ―He had talent. …<br />

He clearly did care about his work and put himself into it. … <strong>Howard</strong>, though he surely would<br />

have denied it, was artist [sic].‖ [33, p. 30] I would have liked to hear him debate the point with<br />

his 25-year-younger self who, in his Conan’s World and <strong>Robert</strong> E. <strong>Howard</strong> (Borgo Press, 1978),<br />

said ―His stories contain thrilling action, vivid description, and sometimes first-rate fantastic<br />

invention, but not much else.‖ [34] Schweitzer now dismisses this book, which has been<br />

generally reviled as the worst work of literary criticism ever penned about REH, as a youthful<br />

rush job. However, he‘s shown little sign of a deepened appreciation for REH‘s genius since, so<br />

I will just answer the question posed by the title of his article with, ―It takes one to know one.‖<br />

Issue #5 was reviewed by Cavalier, who called it ―a great mix of articles and art, living up to<br />

its masthead subtitle: <strong>The</strong> Definitive <strong>Howard</strong> Fanzine. ... [Sasser]‘s set the bar for aspiring<br />

ziners, for sure!‖ [35] Van Hise indexed the contents of REH: TGR #1-5 [36] and #1-7 [37].<br />

REH: TGR #6 came out in the fall of 2004. It again ran 32 black-and-white pages plus covers<br />

in a run of 250 copies, with yellow-tinted covers and a price of $9.95 each. Charles Keegan<br />

provided the front cover, Day the back cover, and Fabian the inside covers. <strong>The</strong> interiors artists<br />

were Ramey, Bill Cavalier, Fabian, Bobb, Fenner, and Day, the latter represented by a 5-page<br />

portfolio of illustrations of ―Red Nails,‖ reprinted from Fantasy Crossroads #8 and Fantasy<br />

Crosswinds #3.<br />

<strong>The</strong> REH story is ―Under the Baobab Tree,‖ reprinted from Cross Plains #5. Sasser is next<br />

with an article on REH‘s Gaelic crusader hero, Cormac Fitzgeoffrey. Fantasy author Karl<br />

Edward Wagner then submits a strange piece on the various drugs and stimulants that writers<br />

have often used to spur or sustain their productivity. He is knowledgeable in them partly<br />

because he indulged himself, though it would be alcohol that would fell him in 1994 at age 48.<br />

13


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<strong>The</strong> final article in the issue is by Benjamin Szumskyj, a controversial figure in REH studies.<br />

A young Australian with limited verbal and research skills, he was a member of REHupa from<br />

2000 to 2002. He was proferred help by some REHupans, but did not accept it gracefully. He<br />

went on to edit the REH lit-crit collections <strong>Robert</strong> E. <strong>Howard</strong>--Power of the Writing Mind<br />

(Mythos Books, 2003) and Two-Gun Bob: A Centennial Study of <strong>Robert</strong> E. <strong>Howard</strong><br />

(Hippocampus, 2006), but was eventually forced out of <strong>Howard</strong>om mainly by Don Herron and<br />

<strong>The</strong> Cimmerian fanzinist Leo Grin, who derided him as the illiterate ―Ben Zoom‖ and pressured<br />

14<br />

REH: TGR #6


REHEAPA<br />

others not to deal with him. It is doubtless better that he is no longer active in the field, but the<br />

same result, I believe, could have been accomplished by simply ignoring his publishing efforts.<br />

And it was uncalled for to tar some of his occasional associates with the same brush.<br />

<strong>The</strong> article, bizarrely titled ―Sheathed in a Virgin‘s Skin or the Desires of Man?—Booking<br />

Passage on the Mythos Train of Thought,‖ is rife with misused words and infelicitous turns of<br />

phrase, which should have been corrected editorially. Szumskyj‘s judgments about which of<br />

REH‘s stories properly belong to Lovecraft‘s Cthulhu Mythos are not without merit, but his<br />

arguments are painful to read.<br />

Issue #6 was reviewed by Van Hise [38]. Sasser himself said it wasn‘t as good as he had<br />

hoped because he had been limited in the amount of time he could spend on it between his job<br />

and wanting to debut it at the <strong>Howard</strong> Days literary festival at Cross Plains, Texas, in 2004 [39].<br />

Sasser had started attending <strong>Howard</strong> Days in 2003, and he and Alma have been fixtures at most<br />

of them ever since. At <strong>Howard</strong> Days 2004, he was on a panel that discussed the <strong>Howard</strong> Boom<br />

of the 1970s. Of <strong>Howard</strong> Days 2005, he said ―Besides <strong>Robert</strong> E. <strong>Howard</strong>, the big attraction for<br />

me at <strong>Howard</strong> Days is the fans. <strong>The</strong>re is also a lot of energy and excitement generated during the<br />

various festivities, and I always leave recharged and motivated.‖ [40, p. 5]<br />

Sasser joined REHupa in October, 2004 for the second time, this time to stay. Shortly before<br />

that, he had erected a Web site for REH: TGR. ―Publishing a fanzine is a labor of love,‖ he said.<br />

―I keep telling myself I‘m breaking even, but even I don‘t believe that whopper. I don‘t have a<br />

ton of money to sink into it or a lot of time to spend on it, but I still do it. Hoping to entertain<br />

and spread the <strong>Howard</strong> word are my main goals, I suppose.‖ [41] His REHupa zine <strong>The</strong> Shadow<br />

Kingdom has appeared approximately every other Mailing (every four months) to date, starting<br />

with Mailing #189. Ranging from 2 to 22 pages, each contains an account of recent activities in<br />

REH fandom, announcements of recent or upcoming REH publications, mailing comments,<br />

artwork he has commissioned for his published zines, and occasional reprints of general interest.<br />

<strong>The</strong> seventh issue of REH: TGR was published in the spring of 2005. Coming to 36 pages<br />

plus gray covers in a run of 250 copies priced at $10.95 each, it showed the continual<br />

improvement the zine would display throughout its run. Keegan again does the front cover,<br />

Cavalier the back cover, and Newton Burcham the inside covers. <strong>The</strong> interior artists are<br />

Burcham, Cavalier, Joe Wehrle, Fabian, and David Burton, the latter doing a portfolio of Conan,<br />

Kull, Bran Mak Morn, and Turlogh O‘Brien.<br />

First up is REH‘s story ―<strong>The</strong> Haunted Hut‖ (its third appearance), after which Glenn Lord<br />

contributes an article in which he traces how the correspondence between REH and Lovecraft led<br />

to REH‘s Cthulhu Mythos stories. <strong>The</strong>se stories, excellent though they are, were produced over<br />

only a 9-month period. HPL was impressed by them. According to Bob‘s father, in a letter to<br />

Bob‘s agent Otis Adelbert Kline, three stories (two of which could be called Cthulhoid), written<br />

just before his death, were found in an envelope bearing REH‘s inscription directing him to send<br />

them to Weird Tales ―in case of my death.‖ If this were true, it would be further evidence that<br />

REH‘s suicide was planned well before his mother‘s death. However, all the stories apparently<br />

dated from years earlier, and Dr. <strong>Howard</strong> not only aggressively marketed what stories had been<br />

15


REHEAPA<br />

left unpublished [42], but he also was not honest when he stated that REH had purchased his<br />

own burial plot. <strong>The</strong> latter was a fact that Sasser unearthed himself [43].<br />

16<br />

REH: TGR <strong>#7</strong>


REHEAPA<br />

Szumskyj appears again with an essay comparing the racism in Shakespeare‘s stories with<br />

that in REH‘s. Besides its clumsy phrasings and grammatical errors, its incoherency leaves the<br />

reader befuddled as to what Szumskyj‘s point is. It turns out it was to fulfill a university<br />

assignment.<br />

Next, Linda Melchione (her name typoed) provides a refreshingly different perspective of the<br />

<strong>Howard</strong> Days event, namely that of a wife accompanying her collector husband. ―Little did I<br />

know that the trip would truly become a life-changing experience and would leave such a<br />

monumental impression.‖ [44] Many others have felt the same.<br />

REHupan Danny Street then presents an article, the first of two, collecting all the information<br />

REH provided about his fictional land of Cimmeria and its inhabitants. It‘s a textbook example<br />

of an interesting question answered by quotes from REH followed by analysis thereof.<br />

<strong>The</strong> issue closes with a review of Del Rey‘s <strong>The</strong> Savage Tales of Solomon Kane (2004) by<br />

Herron, who points out that it‘s the only edition to date containing pure text of all of REH‘s<br />

Kane stories, i.e. corrected for publisher Donald M. Grant‘s bowdlerizations.<br />

REH: TGR <strong>#7</strong> was reviewed by Cavalier [45] and Van Hise [46]. Cavalier says it ―maintains<br />

the solid zining we‘ve come to expect from [Sasser]: interesting, diverse articles and essays, a<br />

nice mix of artwork, some original <strong>Howard</strong>, and even an article from Glenn Lord. <strong>The</strong> overall<br />

quality of the layout and graphic design is top-notch: this fanzine is very pleasing to the eye as<br />

well as to <strong>Howard</strong> fandom.‖ However, Cavalier has little regard for either Szumskyj‘s poorly<br />

written article or Burton‘s malproportioned art.<br />

<strong>The</strong> second half of the first decade of the 21 st century would be notable for the continuing<br />

appearance of pure-text REH books, often of unpublished or hard-to-find material; the<br />

publication of the first full-length definitive REH biography; research and literary criticism of<br />

escalating quality by members of REHupa; the advent of blogs, online fanzines, and Internet<br />

postings, sometimes by those with dubious credentials and intentions; and the acquisition of the<br />

rights to non-public-domain REH material by a giant media corporation. Would Sasser and his<br />

zines be up to the challenge? We shall find out in our concluding installment.<br />

REFERENCES<br />

[1] Sasser, Damon C., Editorial in REH: Two-Gun Raconteur #1, Vol. 1, #1 (Black Coast Press,<br />

Houston), p. 5 (spring, 1976)<br />

[2] Fenner, Arnold M., et al., ―REH Editors/Publishers Roundtable Discussion,‖ Part One in Fantasy<br />

Crossroads #9 (Stygian Isle Press, Lamoni, Iowa), pp. 31-33 (Aug., 1976)<br />

[3] Sasser, Damon C., <strong>The</strong> Shadow Kingdom #5 in REHupa Mailing #197 (Feb., 2006)<br />

[4] Sasser, Damon C., ―God‘s Angry Man‖ in REH: Two-Gun Raconteur #1, Vol. 1, #1 (Black Coast<br />

Press, Houston), p. 7 & 8 (spring, 1976)<br />

17


REHEAPA<br />

[5] Kuhns, Elaine, ―An Astrological Look at REH‖ [Part One] in REH: Two-Gun Raconteur #1, Vol.<br />

1, #1 (Black Coast Press, Houston), pp. 25-27 & 43 (spring, 1976)<br />

[6] Warfield, Wayne, ―<strong>Robert</strong> E. <strong>Howard</strong>: Retrospectively‖ in REH: Two-Gun Raconteur #1, Vol. 1,<br />

#1 (Black Coast Press, Houston), pp.29-32 (spring, 1976)<br />

[7] Roark, Byron, ―An Experiment in Exploitation: Donald M. Grant‘s Conan‖ in REH: Two-Gun<br />

Raconteur #1, Vol. 1, #1 (Black Coast Press, Houston), pp. 33 & 34; see letter by Paul C. Allen in<br />

#2, pp. 4 & 5 (spring, 1976)<br />

[8] Melvin, Charles, Fantasy’s Realm #2, pp. 2 &3, in REHupa Mailing #22 (July, 1976)<br />

[9] Sasser, Damon C., Editorial in REH: Two-Gun Raconteur #2, Vol. 1, #2 (Black Coast Press,<br />

Houston), p. 3 (summer, 1976)<br />

[10] Sasser, Damon, C., Black Lotus #1, p. 1 in REHupa Mailing #23 (Sept., 1976)<br />

[11] Sasser, Damon, C., <strong>The</strong> Shadow Kingdom <strong>#7</strong>, p. 2 in REHupa Mailing #199 (June, 2006)<br />

[12] Hoppenstand, Gary, ―Broadswords and Cardboard Barbarians: <strong>The</strong> Heroic Fantasy of <strong>Robert</strong> E.<br />

<strong>Howard</strong>‖ in Starwind Science Fiction and Fantasy #2, Vol. 1, #2 (Warren DiLeo, Ohio State<br />

University, Columbus, Ohio), pp. 57-60 (spring, 1976)<br />

[13] McHaney, Dennis, ―<strong>Robert</strong> E. <strong>Howard</strong> and the Ring, Part One‖ in REH: Two-Gun Raconteur #3,<br />

Vol. 1, #3 (Black Coast Press, Houston), pp. 15-17 (winter, 1976)<br />

[14] Roark, Byron L., ―Vultures over Cross Plains‖ in REH: Lone Star Fictioneer #3, Vol. 1, #3<br />

(<strong>Nemedian</strong> Chronicles, Shawnee Mission, Kan.), pp. 40-45 (fall, 1975); see letters by Dirk Mosig,<br />

Wayne Warfield, & L. Sprague de Camp in #4, p. 62; ―Vultures‖ & de Camp‘s reply reprinted in <strong>The</strong><br />

Road to Velitrium #29 (ed. James Van Hise), pp. 15-21 in REHupa Mailing #155 (Feb., 1999)<br />

[15] Roark, Byron L., and Fenner, Arnie M. ―Arnie,‖ ―Sons of REH/Interview: L. Sprague de Camp‖ in<br />

REH: Lone Star Fictioneer #4, Vol. 1, #4 (<strong>Nemedian</strong> Chronicles, Shawnee Mission, Kan.), pp. 36-<br />

39 (spring, 1976); reprinted in <strong>The</strong> Barbarian Keep #26 (ed. Edward Waterman), pp. 5-9 in REHupa<br />

Mailing #178 (Dec., 2002)<br />

[16] De Camp, L. Sprague, Letter in REH: Lone Star Fictioneer #4, Vol. 1, #4 (<strong>Nemedian</strong> Chronicles,<br />

Shawnee Mission, Kan.), p. 62 (spring, 1976)<br />

[17] Herron, Don, ―Conan vs. Conantics‖ in And in His Dream #5, pp. 2-9 in <strong>The</strong> Hyperborian League<br />

Mailing #5 (Oct., 1976); reprinted in REH: Two-Gun Raconteur #3, Vol. 1, #3 (Black Coast Press,<br />

Houston), pp. 23-31 (winter, 1976) & in Pusad Regurgitated #1, pp. 2-10 in REHupa Mailing #96<br />

(Mar., 1989); recapped in his ―Thirty Years as a <strong>Howard</strong> Critic (in Twenty Minutes or Less),‖ in <strong>The</strong><br />

Cimmerian, Vol. 1, #5 (Leo Grin, Playa del Rey, Cal.), pp. 13-20 (Dec., 2004)<br />

[18] Herron, Don, Letter in REH: Lone Star Fictioneer #4, Vol. 1, #4 (<strong>Nemedian</strong> Chronicles,<br />

Shawnee Mission, Kan.), p. 5 (spring, 1976)<br />

18


REHEAPA<br />

[19] De Camp, L. Sprague, Letter in REH: Lone Star Fictioneer #4, Vol. 1, #4 (<strong>Nemedian</strong><br />

Chronicles, Shawnee Mission, Kan.), pp. 4 (spring, 1976)<br />

[20] Sasser, Damon C., Letter in <strong>The</strong> Cimmerian, Vol. 2, #1 (Leo Grin, Playa del Rey, Cal.), p. 31<br />

(Feb., 2005)<br />

[21] Herron, Don, ―<strong>The</strong> Tennessee Kid: Some History‖ in Yours for Faster Hippos: Thirty Years<br />

of “Conan vs. Conantics,” <strong>The</strong> Cimmerian Library, Vol. 4 (<strong>The</strong> Cimmerian Press, Playa<br />

del Rey, Cal., 2007), pp. 18-25<br />

[22] Herron, Don, Letter, in <strong>The</strong> Cimmerian, Vol. 2, #2 (Leo Grin, Playa del Rey, Cal.), pp. 35-38<br />

(Apr., 2005)<br />

[23] Hall, Loay, Letter in REH: Lone Star Fictioneer #4, Vol. 1, #4 (<strong>Nemedian</strong> Chronicles, Shawnee<br />

Mission, Kan.), pp. 5 & 36 (spring, 1976)<br />

[24] Cook, Kevin, Letter in REH: Lone Star Fictioneer #4, Vol. 1, #4 (<strong>Nemedian</strong> Chronicles,<br />

Shawnee Mission, Kan.), pp. 36 (spring, 1976)<br />

[25] Sasser, Damon C., ―Echoes from Bal-Sagoth‖ in REH: Two-Gun Raconteur #4, Vol. 1, #4 (Black<br />

Coast Press, Houston), pp. 13-18 (summer, 1977); reprinted in <strong>The</strong> Man from Cross Plains: A<br />

Centennial Celebration of Two-Gun Bob <strong>Howard</strong> (ed. Dennis McHaney, Lulu.com, 2006), pp.<br />

167-178<br />

[26] Roark, Byron, ―Ridin‘ the Range with <strong>Robert</strong> E. <strong>Howard</strong>‖ in REH: Two-Gun Raconteur #4, Vol.<br />

1, #4 (Black Coast Press, Houston), pp. 31-35 (summer, 1977)<br />

[27] Sasser, Damon C., Editorial in <strong>The</strong> Chronicler of Cross Plains #1, Vol. 1, #1 (Black Coast Press,<br />

Houston), p. 3 (fall, 1978)<br />

[28] Reid, Thomas R., ―REH and Cultural Trends in Literature‖ in <strong>The</strong> Chronicler of Cross Plains #1,<br />

Vol. 1, #1 (Black Coast Press, Houston), pp. 45, 47, & 51 (fall, 1978); reprinted as ―Cultural Trends<br />

in Literature‖ in <strong>The</strong> Dark Man #2, July 1991 (Necronomicon Press, West Warwick, R.I.), pp. 30-32<br />

[29] Sasser, Damon C., Editorial in <strong>The</strong> Chronicler of Cross Plains #1, Vol. 1, #1 (Black Coast Press,<br />

Houston), p. 3 (fall, 1978)<br />

[30] Salmonson, Jessica Amanda, ―Thoughts on the Enjoyment of Heroic Fantasy‖ in Thrust: Science<br />

Fiction and Fantasy Review #34 (Thrust Publications, Gaithersburg, Md.), pp. 15-17 (summer,<br />

1989); reprinted as ―<strong>The</strong> Sins of Our Tastes, the Sins of Our Trade‖ in REH: Two-Gun Raconteur<br />

#5, Vol. 1, #5 (Black Coast Press, Channelview, Tex.), pp. 9-11 (winter, 2003); revision at<br />

http://www.violetbooks.com/heroic.html<br />

[31] Sasser, Damon C., ―El Dios Diabólico de Tlasceltec‖ in REH: Two-Gun Raconteur #5, Vol. 1, #5<br />

(Black Coast Press, Channelview, Tex.), pp. 13, 14, & 31 (winter, 2003)<br />

[32] <strong>Howard</strong>, <strong>Robert</strong> E., and Offutt, Andrew J., ―Nekht Semerkeht‖ in Swords against<br />

Darkness (Zebra Books, New York, 1977), pp. 12-48<br />

19


REHEAPA<br />

[33] Schweitzer, Darrell, ―Was <strong>Robert</strong> E <strong>Howard</strong> a Hack?‖ in REH: Two-Gun Raconteur #5, Vol. 1, #5<br />

(Black Coast Press, Channelview, Tex.), pp. 27-30 (winter, 2003)<br />

[34] Schweitzer, Darrell, Conan’s World and <strong>Robert</strong> E. <strong>Howard</strong> (Borgo Press, San<br />

Bernardino, Cal., 1978), p. 58<br />

[35] Cavalier, William ―Indy,‖ Cold Steel #106, pp. 3 & 4, in REHupa Mailing #184 (Dec.,<br />

2003)<br />

[36] Van Hise, James, <strong>The</strong> Road to Velitrium #51, pp. 2-4 in REHupa Mailing #184 (Dec.,<br />

2003)<br />

[37] Van Hise, James, ―A <strong>Robert</strong> E. <strong>Howard</strong> Fanzine Rises from the Grave,‖ in Sword &<br />

Fantasy #1 (James Van Hise, Yucca Valley, Cal.), pp. 28-31 (Jan., 2005)<br />

[38] Van Hise, James, <strong>The</strong> Road to Velitrium #53, p. 54, in REHupa Mailing #188 (Aug., 2004)<br />

[39] Grin, Leo, ―When You Wish upon a (Wandering) Star,‖ in <strong>The</strong> Cimmerian, Vol. 2, #4 (Leo Grin,<br />

Playa del Rey, Cal.), pp. 5-18 (Aug.., 2005)<br />

[40] Sasser, Damon C., <strong>The</strong> Shadow Kingdom #2, p. 1, in REHupa Mailing #191 (Feb., 2005)<br />

[41] Sasser, Damon C., <strong>The</strong> Shadow Kingdom #1, p. 1, in REHupa Mailing #189 (Oct., 2004)<br />

[42] Louinet, Patrice, ―Grief & Greed? Isaac Mordecai <strong>Howard</strong> and the <strong>Robert</strong> E. <strong>Howard</strong><br />

Estate, June 1936-March 1937‖ in Dwelling in Dark Valley #2 (June, 2001) at REHEAPA<br />

(http://www.robert-e-howard.org/Dwelling2.html)<br />

[43] Sasser, Damon C., ―1 st Addition, W Half, Lot 13, Block 25, Spaces 10,‖ in the REH: Two-<br />

Gun Raconteur Blog, 8 Nov. 2010 (http://rehtwogunraconteur.com/?s=greenleaf)<br />

[44] Melchione, Linda, ―A Woman Looks at Cross Plains‖ in REH: Two-Gun Raconteur <strong>#7</strong>, Vol. 1, <strong>#7</strong><br />

(Black Coast Press, Channelview, Tex.), pp. 21-23 (spring, 2005)<br />

[45] Cavalier, William ―Indy,‖ Cold Steel #113, pp. 4 & 5 in REHupa Mailing #191 (Feb.,<br />

2005)<br />

[46] Van Hise, James, <strong>The</strong> Road to Velitrium #55, p. 6 in REHupa Mailing #191 (Feb., 2005)<br />

20


REHEAPA<br />

THE ROBERT E. HOWARD BIBLIOGRAPHY OF SECONDARY<br />

SOURCES, PART VII<br />

<strong>The</strong> list of articles below is complete insofar as it contains all items relating to <strong>Howard</strong>, excepting those<br />

by <strong>Howard</strong> himself (being primary references and cataloged elsewhere) and those inspired by <strong>Howard</strong>,<br />

such as poems by others (being primary references by those authors). It is in alphabetical order by author<br />

and then by title. <strong>The</strong> abstract, if any, is in brackets.<br />

<strong>The</strong> Chronicler of Cross Plains #1<br />

REH: Two-Gun Raconteur #1-7<br />

(fanzine series edited and published by Damon C. Sasser)<br />

AUTHOR REFERENCE<br />

Herron, Don ―Conan vs. Conantics‖ [assessment & disapprobation of Conan pastiches<br />

written by L. Sprague de Camp & Lin Carter] in And in His Dream #5, pp. 2-9<br />

in <strong>The</strong> Hyperborian League Mailing #5 (Oct., 1976); reprinted in REH:<br />

Two-Gun Raconteur #3, Vol. 1, #3 (Black Coast Press, Houston), pp. 23-31<br />

(winter, 1976) & in Pusad Regurgitated #1, pp. 2-10 in REHupa Mailing #96<br />

(Mar., 1989); see letters by Daniel Gobbett, Paul C. Allen, L. Sprague de<br />

Camp, Don Herron, Loay Hall, & Kevin Cook in REH:TGR #4, pp. 4, 5, & 36<br />

Herron, Don Review of <strong>The</strong> Savage Tales of Solomon Kane (by REH; Del Rey, 2004) in<br />

REH: Two-Gun Raconteur <strong>#7</strong>, Vol. 1, <strong>#7</strong> (Black Coast Press, Channelview,<br />

Tex.), pp. 34 & 35 (spring, 2005)<br />

Kuhns, Elaine ―An Astrological Look at REH‖ [Part One] in REH: Two-Gun Raconteur #1,<br />

Vol. 1, #1 (Black Coast Press, Houston), pp. 25-27 & 43 (spring, 1976)<br />

Kuhns, Elaine ―Scorpio Rising: An Astrological Look at REH‖ [Part Two] in REH: Two-<br />

Gun Raconteur #2, Vol. 1, #2 (Black Coast Press, Houston), pp. 21 & 22<br />

(summer, 1976)<br />

Kuhns, Elaine ―<strong>The</strong> Stars and the Skald‖ [Part Three of REH‘s horoscope] in REH: Two-<br />

Gun Raconteur #4, Vol. 1, #4 (Black Coast Press, Houston), pp. 23-25<br />

(summer, 1977)<br />

Lord, Glenn ―REH, HPL, and the Cthulhu Mythos‖ [of H. P. Lovecraft] in REH: Two-Gun<br />

Raconteur <strong>#7</strong>, Vol. 1, <strong>#7</strong> (Black Coast Press, Channelview, Tex.), pp. 8 & 9<br />

(spring, 2005)<br />

Lord, Glenn ―<strong>The</strong> Writing Game‖ [history of REH‘s jobs & sales of stories & poems to pulp<br />

markets, with a photo of REH & David Lee] in REH: Lone Star Fictioneer<br />

#1, Vol. 1, #1 (<strong>Nemedian</strong> Chronicles, Kansas City, Kan.), pp. 9-12 (spring,<br />

1975); reprinted minus photo in <strong>The</strong> Chronicler of Cross Plains #1, Vol. 1,<br />

#1 (Black Coast Press, Houston), pp. 15-17 (fall, 1978)<br />

21


REHEAPA<br />

McHaney, Dennis ―<strong>Robert</strong> E. <strong>Howard</strong> and the Ring, Part One‖ [survey of REH‘s boxing stories]<br />

in REH: Two-Gun Raconteur #3, Vol. 1, #3 (Black Coast Press, Houston),<br />

pp. 15-17 (winter, 1976)<br />

Melchione, Linda ―A Woman Looks at Cross Plains‖ [her experiences at <strong>Howard</strong> Days 2003] in<br />

REH: Two-Gun Raconteur <strong>#7</strong>, Vol. 1, <strong>#7</strong> (Black Coast Press, Channelview,<br />

Tex.), pp. 21-23 (spring, 2005)<br />

Melvin, Charles ―<strong>The</strong> Rare Ones‖ [REH hardback collecting] in REH: Two-Gun Raconteur<br />

#3, Vol. 1, #3 (Black Coast Press, Houston), pp. 33-36 (winter, 1976)<br />

Parsons, David Review of <strong>The</strong> Book of <strong>Robert</strong> E. <strong>Howard</strong> (ed. Glenn Lord; Zebra, 1976) in<br />

REH: Two-Gun Raconteur #2, Vol. 1, #2 (Black Coast Press, Houston), pp.<br />

32 & 33 (summer, 1976)<br />

Reid, Thomas R. ―REH and Cultural Trends in Literature‖ [REH‘s & H.P. Lovecraft‘s<br />

antagonists & attitudes toward civilization] in <strong>The</strong> Chronicler of Cross Plains<br />

#1, Vol. 1, #1 (Black Coast Press, Houston), pp. 45, 47, & 51 (fall, 1978);<br />

reprinted as ―Cultural Trends in Literature‖ in <strong>The</strong> Dark Man #2, July 1991<br />

(Necronomicon Press, West Warwick, R.I.), pp. 30-32<br />

Riley, Steven T. Review of Night Images (by REH; Morning Star, 1977)] in REH: Two-Gun<br />

Raconteur #4, Vol. 1, #4 (Black Coast Press, Houston), pp. 37 & 38 (summer,<br />

1977)<br />

Roark, Byron L. ―An Experiment in Exploitation: Donald M. Grant‘s Conan‖ [review of <strong>The</strong><br />

People of the Black Circle, A Witch Shall Be Born, & <strong>The</strong> Tower of the<br />

Elephant (by REH; Donald M. Grant)] in REH: Two-Gun Raconteur #1, Vol.<br />

1, #1 (Black Coast Press, Houston), pp. 33 & 34; see letter by Paul C. Allen in<br />

#2, pp. 4 & 5 (spring, 1976)<br />

Roark, Byron L. ―Ridin‘ the Range with <strong>Robert</strong> E. <strong>Howard</strong>‖ [on REH‘s western stories] in<br />

REH: Two-Gun Raconteur #4, Vol. 1, #4 (Black Coast Press, Houston), pp.<br />

31-35 (summer, 1977)<br />

Salmonson, Jessica ―Thoughts on the Enjoyment of Heroic Fantasy‖ [objectives of heroic<br />

Amanda fantasy] in Thrust: Science Fiction and Fantasy Review #34 (Thrust<br />

Publications, Gaithersburg, Md.), pp. 15-17 (summer, 1989); reprinted as ―<strong>The</strong><br />

Sins of Our Tastes, the Sins of Our Trade‖ in REH: Two-Gun Raconteur #5,<br />

Vol. 1, #5 (Black Coast Press, Channelview, Tex.), pp. 9-11 (winter, 2003);<br />

revision at http://www.violetbooks.com/heroic.html<br />

Sasser, Damon C. ―<strong>The</strong> Annotated Solomon Kane‖ [synopses of his stories & fragments] in<br />

REH: Two-Gun Raconteur #1, Vol. 1, #1 (Black Coast Press, Houston), pp.<br />

9-16 (spring, 1976)<br />

Sasser, Damon C. ―<strong>The</strong> Complete Kane‖ [list of Solomon Kane stories & fragments with date of<br />

first appearance] in REH: Two-Gun Raconteur #1, Vol. 1, #1 (Black Coast<br />

Press, Houston), p. 19 (spring, 1976)<br />

22


REHEAPA<br />

Sasser, Damon C. ―Echoes from Bal-Sagoth‖ [on REH‘s hero Turlogh Dubh O‘Brien] in REH:<br />

Two-Gun Raconteur #4, Vol. 1, #4 (Black Coast Press, Houston), pp. 13-18<br />

(summer, 1977)<br />

Sasser, Damon C. ―El Dios Diabólico de Tlasceltec‖ [on REH‘s fragment ―Nekht Semerkeht‖] in<br />

REH: Two-Gun Raconteur #5, Vol. 1, #5 (Black Coast Press, Channelview,<br />

Tex.), pp. 13, 14, & 31 (winter, 2003)<br />

Sasser, Damon C. ―God‘s Angry Man‖ [sketch of Solomon Kane‘s career & the stories & books<br />

he appeared in] in REH: Two-Gun Raconteur #1, Vol. 1, #1 (Black Coast<br />

Press, Houston), pp. 7 & 8 (spring, 1976)<br />

Sasser, Damon C. ―<strong>The</strong> Kane Glossary‖ [list & description of characters in Solomon Kane<br />

stories] in REH: Two-Gun Raconteur #1, Vol. 1, #1 (Black Coast Press,<br />

Houston), pp. 17 & 18 (spring, 1976)<br />

Sasser, Damon C. ―Red Sonya vs. Red Sonja‖ [review of Roy Thomas‘s adaptation of the<br />

character for Marvel Comics] in REH: Two-Gun Raconteur #1, Vol. 1, #1<br />

(Black Coast Press, Houston), pp. 41 & 42 (spring, 1976)<br />

Sasser, Damon C. Review of Bloodstar: King of the Northern Abyss (by Richard Corben, REH, &<br />

John Jakes; Morning Star, 1976) in REH: Two-Gun Raconteur #2, Vol. 1, #2<br />

(Black Coast Press, Houston), p. 34 (summer, 1976)<br />

Sasser, Damon C. Review of Graveyard Rats (by REH; Wildside, 2003) in REH: Two-Gun<br />

Raconteur #5, Vol. 1, #5 (Black Coast Press, Channelview, Tex.), p. 32<br />

(winter, 2003)<br />

Sasser, Damon C. Review of <strong>The</strong> Iron Man (by REH; Zebra, 1976) in REH: Two-Gun<br />

Raconteur #2, Vol. 1, #2 (Black Coast Press, Houston), p. 33 (summer, 1976)<br />

Sasser, Damon C. Review of <strong>Robert</strong> E. <strong>Howard</strong> – <strong>The</strong> Power of the Writing Mind (ed. Benjamin<br />

Szumskyj; Mythos, 2003) in REH: Two-Gun Raconteur #6, Vol. 1, #6<br />

(Black Coast Press, Channelview, Tex.), p. 32 (fall, 2004)<br />

Sasser, Damon C. Review of <strong>The</strong> Ultimate Guide to <strong>Howard</strong>ia (by Wayne Warfield; Hall, 1976)<br />

in REH: Two-Gun Raconteur #2, Vol. 1, #2 (Black Coast Press, Houston),<br />

p. 33 (summer, 1976)<br />

Sasser, Damon C. ―<strong>The</strong> Vengeance Sword of the Norman-Gael‖ [REH‘s Cormac Fitzgeoffrey<br />

crusader stories] in REH: Two-Gun Raconteur #6, Vol. 1, #6 (Black Coast<br />

Press, Channelview, Tex.), pp. 11-13 (fall, 2004)<br />

Saunders, Charles R. ―A Mouthful of Feathers‖ [comparison of Conan & Tarzan] in <strong>The</strong> Chronicler<br />

of Cross Plains #1, Vol. 1, #1 (Black Coast Press, Houston), pp. 29, 30, & 51<br />

(fall, 1978)<br />

Schweitzer, Darrell ―Was <strong>Robert</strong> E <strong>Howard</strong> a Hack?‖ in REH: Two-Gun Raconteur #5, Vol. 1,<br />

#5 (Black Coast Press, Channelview, Tex.), pp. 27-30 (winter, 2003)<br />

23


REHEAPA<br />

Smolins, Steve ―Collecting <strong>Howard</strong>ia‖ [REH book & fanzine collecting] in REH: Two-Gun<br />

Raconteur #2, Vol. 1, #2 (Black Coast Press, Houston), pp. 23-25 (summer,<br />

1976)<br />

Smolins, Steve Review of Official Guide to the Fantastics (by Michael Resnick; House of<br />

Collectibles, 1976) [plus comments on collectible REH books] in REH: Two-<br />

Gun Raconteur #3, Vol. 1, #3 (Black Coast Press, Houston), pp. 37 & 38<br />

(winter, 1976)<br />

Street, Danny ―A Dark Gray Heritage: A Collective Study of <strong>Robert</strong> E. <strong>Howard</strong>‘s<br />

Cimmerians,‖ Part One in REH: Two-Gun Raconteur <strong>#7</strong>, Vol. 1, <strong>#7</strong> (Black<br />

Coast Press, Channelview, Tex.), pp. 25-33 (spring, 2005)<br />

Szumskyj, Benjamin ―Brothers of the Night: A Cultural Materialistic Study of Shakespeare‘s ‗Prince<br />

of Morocco‘ & <strong>Robert</strong> E. <strong>Howard</strong>‘s ‗Jacob‘‖ [in ―Pigeons from Hell‖] in REH:<br />

Two-Gun Raconteur <strong>#7</strong>, Vol. 1, <strong>#7</strong> (Black Coast Press, Channelview, Tex.),<br />

pp. 11-15 & 23 (spring, 2005)<br />

Szumskyj, Benjamin ―Sheathed in a Virgin‘s Skin or the Desires of Man? – Booking Passage on the<br />

Mythos Train of Thought‖ [REH‘s Cthulhu Mythos stories] in REH: Two-<br />

Gun Raconteur #6, Vol. 1, #6 (Black Coast Press, Channelview, Tex.), pp.<br />

21-31 (fall, 2004)<br />

Wallace, Bill ―Forgotten Secrets of Bloody Pride‖ [on REH‘s ―Pigeons from Hell‖] in REH:<br />

Two-Gun Raconteur #4, Vol. 1, #4 (Black Coast Press, Houston), pp. 27-29<br />

(summer, 1977); posted at http://rehtwogunraconteur.com/?page_id=2720<br />

Wallace, Bill ―<strong>The</strong> Sense of Hideous Antiquity‖ [analysis of REH‘s ―<strong>The</strong> Horror from the<br />

Mound‖] in REH: Two-Gun Raconteur #1, Vol. 1, #1 (Black Coast Press,<br />

Houston), pp.35-37 (spring, 1976)<br />

Warfield, Wayne ―<strong>The</strong> Legendary Celts: REH and the Celtic Strain‖ [what is known of the<br />

historical Celts] in REH: Two-Gun Raconteur #2, Vol. 1, #2 (Black Coast<br />

Press, Houston), pp. 13-15 (summer, 1976)<br />

Warfield, Wayne ―<strong>Robert</strong> E. <strong>Howard</strong>: Retrospectively‖ [sketch of REH‘s life, personality, &<br />

prowess as an author] in REH: Two-Gun Raconteur #1, Vol. 1, #1 (Black<br />

Coast Press, Houston), pp.29-32 (spring, 1976)<br />

© 2010 Lee A. Breakiron<br />

24

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