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Robert E. Howard

The architect of sword and sorcery. Conan the Cimmerian, and the pulp foundations the modern genre is still building on.

Robert E. Howard's Conan stories — written in the 1930s, mostly for Weird Tales magazine — defined the sword and sorcery subgenre. The format: short, punchy, action-driven, with a barbarian hero whose code is his own and whose adventures don't require world-saving stakes. His Kull, Solomon Kane, and Bran Mak Morn stories extend the pulp range. The prose is muscular and atmospheric, the action is visceral, and the influence on everything from Glen Cook to grimdark is impossible to overstate.

For adult readers who want the genre's foundational pulp register. Content includes violence, some sexual content (period-appropriate, varying by story), and racial and gender attitudes that reflect their era — modern readers approach this work with that awareness. The reading experience is short-form intensity: most Conan stories are novella or shorter, designed to deliver a complete adventure in a sitting. Pick this shelf when you want the genre's foundational sword-and-sorcery voice, and a writer whose influence shaped a century of fantasy.

What to expect
  • Foundational sword and sorcery
  • Short-form intensity perfected
  • Pulp action at its sharpest
  • Influence on the modern genre
33 books in our directoryGenres: Fantasy, Sword & Sorcery
R: 10PG: 1PG-13: 11
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