Robert E. Howard Readers discussion

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Bran Mak Morn
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The battle description was truly amazing to read.





I thought he only wrote one Bran pastiche. He also did a Conan pastiche called Road of Kings, which a lot of readers like. I thought it was OK, but not great.

I agree that his "Road of Kings" was OK but not great. It's probably the only KEW I've ever read (other than the intros to the REH volumes he edited). So I take it that the Bran Mak Morn story was better than his Conan story?

I think KEW's Bran story was much better than the Conan one. It had strong elements of horror. His Kane stuff is excellent, I think btw. I also like David C. Smith's For the Witch of the Indies, which one of the better pastiches.

The title of the Haggard novel is SHE AND ALLAN. It's the second of two "prequels" Haggard wrote after he finished up She's saga in the second book-- which, as it happens, is exactly the same process he did with Quatermain, albeit with many, many more prequels.

Tangentially, The Dark Man is a Bran Mak Morn tale; it is my favorite REH story.





The play, "Bran Mak Morn" shows that it was written when he was 16 or 17 because it includes an "As you know, Bob..." moment, which is typically regarded as a sign of poor writing.
The synopsis sounded interesting.


Check out the REH forum at conan.com. On Jan 7th "Wandering Star" posted that a Bran Mak Morn TV series is in the works.
Didn't see it posted elsewhere here so I thought it fitting to add it to the Bran Mak Morn post.
One thing I remember liking about Bran Mak Morn when I read of him in the past was this sense of doom - that when Bran goes, so goes an entire race. That Bran Mak Morn cannot stop the march of entropy but can, at best, hold it back for a short while. This story had some elements of that, but not enough.