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When you think of Conan you think of this...

Then you think of the screaming barbarian...

Whoops, sorry, I meant this...

Fittingly, in reading Robert Howard's original Conan the Barbarian stories, what you soon realize is that Conan is a man of many faces: barbarian, lone wolf, war chief, king, pirate, thief. Ironically, that paradigm shifts somewhat in The Hour of the Dragon, which is a mishmash of, not so much the various Conans, but rather settings and, to steal a D&D term, encounters.
I think th ...more

Then you think of the screaming barbarian...

Whoops, sorry, I meant this...

Fittingly, in reading Robert Howard's original Conan the Barbarian stories, what you soon realize is that Conan is a man of many faces: barbarian, lone wolf, war chief, king, pirate, thief. Ironically, that paradigm shifts somewhat in The Hour of the Dragon, which is a mishmash of, not so much the various Conans, but rather settings and, to steal a D&D term, encounters.
I think th ...more

Jul 18, 2016
S.E. Lindberg
rated it
really liked it
·
review of another edition
Shelves:
reviewed-by-se,
sword-sorcery-group-authors
"From death to death [
The Heart of Ahriman]
came, riding on a river of human blood. Blood feeds it, blood draws it. Its power is greatest when there is blood on the hands that grasp it, when it is wrested by slaughter from its holder. Wherever it gleams, blood is spilt and kingdoms totter, and the forc
es of nature are put in turmoil." --
Thutothmes of Khemi (The Hour of The Dragon, by REH)
The Hour of the Dragon (1934-1936), is Robert E. Howard''s only ...more
The Hour of the Dragon (1934-1936), is Robert E. Howard''s only ...more

I could read this many times (three, so far) and pick out some new facet each time. F'instance:
* Howard touches several times on the theme that Conan's lone-wolf nature is both strength and weakness. He is dedicated to his kingdom, but is not committed to it: he neither married nor produced an heir. Upon his presumed death, the barons cannot rally around an heir and thus the center of the kingdom will not hold.
* A foozle quest--in this case the Heart of Ahriman--is required to save the kingdom, ...more
* Howard touches several times on the theme that Conan's lone-wolf nature is both strength and weakness. He is dedicated to his kingdom, but is not committed to it: he neither married nor produced an heir. Upon his presumed death, the barons cannot rally around an heir and thus the center of the kingdom will not hold.
* A foozle quest--in this case the Heart of Ahriman--is required to save the kingdom, ...more

Dec 30, 2015
Michael
rated it
it was amazing
·
review of another edition
Shelves:
science-fiction-fantasy,
fiction
This is the only novel Robert E. Howard ever wrote about Conan, and somehow I never got around to reading it. It is a lot of fun; like watching a cartoon or playing a video game: Conan has become the king of Aquilonia, Conan is deposed from his throne by an evil wizard who has been resurrected from the misty past of Hyperboria, Conan goes on a quest to find the one magical jewel that can send said wizard back to the Abyss, Conan beats the crap out of everyone who gets in his way. Plus: a lot of
...more



Oct 26, 2013
Aaron Meyer
marked it as to-read
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review of another edition
Shelves:
sword-and-sorcery,
fantasy

Nov 12, 2013
Evan
marked it as to-read

Dec 08, 2016
John Adkins
marked it as to-read

Nov 08, 2019
Emperor
rated it
it was amazing
·
review of another edition
Shelves:
fiction,
fantasy,
sword-and-sorcery,
conan,
novels,
pulp,
high-fantasy,
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books-i-own