Pulpy Goodness
Filed under: Books
It’s always nice to find new reprint collections of old pulp stories. I’m a big fan of these stories — sure, many of the characters are rather two-dimensional and the plots paper-thin — but there are enough diamonds in the rough to make it worth the time and effort. In the past year or two, a number of my favorites have managed to work their way back into print:
El Borak, by Robert E. Howard
The White Wolf — a.k.a. El Borak — is my second favorite Howard character (with Solomon Kane being number one). El Borak has swashbuckling adventures in the early part of the twentieth century: think Lawrence of Arabia with a liberal dash of sword and sorcery. His stories have been out of print for decades, but will be available Tuesday in a nice new edition.
Jirel of Joiry and Northwest Smith, by C. L. Moore
Moore was one of the first female adventure pulp writers — she wrote as “C. L.” instead of Catherine to disguise her gender. Most of her stories were published in Weird Tales and have a slight Lovecraftian feel to them.
Jirel is the ruler of a small medieval kingdom and her lands always seem to be under threat from natural, and supernatural, enemies. Her stories tend towards the darker aspect of fantasy.
Northwest Smith is a smuggler and anti-hero in the distant future. His stories have a darker edge to them as well.
The Science Fiction Book Club has inexpensive hardbound collections of Jirel and Northwest Smith. Paizo, under their Planet Stories imprint, also offers a Jirel as well as a Northwest Smith collection. (Paizo also offers several collections of Moore’s husband and fellow writer, Henry Kuttner. Sadly, I haven’t seen any recent reissues of stories by Lewis Padgett, which was the name Moore and Kuttner used when they collaborated together on a story).
Speaking of Paizo, they also are offering what look to be great collections of the Eric John Stark series by Leigh Brackett.
February 8th, 2010 at 7:56 am
Thanks for the heads-up on the REH stuff. I’ve got a lot of love for Conan, but I can so get into something different from The Man.
February 8th, 2010 at 7:49 pm
Scott, Paizo’s published a collection of the Gallegher Galloway stories which, I think, were technically Lewis Padgetts. (Although Paizo published them under Kuttner’s byline.) I keep hoping they’d reprint The Fairy Chessmen or something, though!
Arkonbey, if all you know is Conan, do yourself a huge favor and pick up the complete Solomon Kane collection that came out a few years ago. As with Scott, he’s my favorite REH character too!
February 18th, 2010 at 12:49 am
According to C. L. Moore, she didn’t help with the Gallegher stories, just read them and laughed. I have an old paperback version in which she wrote the intro.
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