All of the quotes below feature the character of Conan, but only one was actually written by Robert E. Howard. Any guesses as to which? Any idea who the other authors might be? I'll post the answers in a couple of days by just adding them to this post.
1. "Before them all came the giant form of
Conan. Arrows had ripped his white khalat,
exposing the glittering black mail that clad his lion-thewed torso."
2. "There was blood on the Cimmerian's
mail, dried blood on the sword in his right hand;
he loomed dim and gigantic in the shadowy light."
3. "Both Conan's knees bent to drop him
straight down into a squat below the mighty
cut. He heard the wind-noise of the
rushing blade, too close above his
head."
4. "The Cimmerian strode forward through
the dull light and dust of the battlefield. His sword was red, his knuckles white from
the harsh grip of his hand on the
hilt.
5. "Conan pivoted on his buttocks, his foot
rising to meet a hurtling nomad in the
stomach. With a gagging gasp the man
stopped dead, black eyes goggling as
he bent double."
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24 comments:
At risk of embarrassing myself, I respond without researching this.. #4 seemed closest to REH to me.
Curse you, Gramlich! *shakes fist*
I'm guessing #1 is Howard. If it isn't, someone is doing a good job copying him. The "giant form of Conan" bit sounds like REH, as does the "lion-thewed" part.
#4 could be as well.
As for the others, I don't know. I haven't read enough of the other authors recently to know. Jordan is probably one of them, I'm guessing.
hmmm i was thinking #4
i got not idea on who the other writers might be....
Number 4 for sure. No idea who the rest could be.
1.) de Camp, I'm pretty sure. Maybe. Possibly with Lin Carter.
2.)Bob Howard.
3.)Andrew Offutt. Maybe.
4.)I'm thinking Wagner, but not sure. Definitely has a Wagner feel to it.
5.)Robert Jordan.
Not my wheelhouse. So I'll just offer a friendly ALOHA from Honolulu
ComfortSpiral
=^..^= <3
I like # 4 for Howard. As for the rest, been too many years since I read Conan. de Camp and Jordan probably.
Not sure, Charles. I haven't read much of REH, so I'll wait for your answers.
I didn't know Conan was from a book
Interesting. I'll be a rebel and say the second one.
No earthly idea, but some of the software that helps identify authors based on style and word usage would be fun to test here.
Seth, Answers up soon.
Chris, you may or may not be correct.
Brian, I have all the answers.
Tom, soon
Ty, humm.
CLoudia, tis ok.
Randy, been a while for me too.
Prashant, soon
Lisa, yes, Howard wrote short stories about Conan back in the early 1930s.
Alex, an interesting choice.
Sage, the selections are probably too short.
Love it, except that Cimmerians were antique Ukrainians. :)
This is harder than I thought, and I can't pick a winner. I'm guessing 1 or 2 for Howard, 4 Wagner, maybe, 5 Jordan and 3 Offutt (for no other reason that the wording sounding similar to a passage at the beginning of Sword of Skelos).
Thewed is such an old-fashioned, antique word. I find it in the early frontier fiction I read and review on my blog. But it could be a word that the Conan genre itself has kept alive.
Just to add to the fun: The reasonings behind my choices ...
1.) "lion-thewed" sounds to me like someone trying to sound like Howard, but not Howard himself. Thus I picked de Camp, because nobody wanted it more.
2.) "loomed dim and gigantic in the shadowy light" ... come on, that's got Howard written all over it.
3.) This is the most clumsy of the bunch, which led me to Offutt. While I loved Andy's writing, it was definitely quirky and took some getting used to.
4.) I don't know what to say other than this sounds like Wagner to me. I could imagine similar lines in a number of Kane tales. There's almost a horror feel here.
5.) To me, this had a modern ring to it, which made me think of Jordan. Sure, technically Offutt and Wagner (and others) were early contemporaries of Jordan, but those other writers tended to have a more archaic style when it came to their own Conan stories.
Wow, Ty gets extra credit for sure!
I think I know which one is Howard, but I didn't look more deeply beyond that.
Number four. If it's not number four, that author writes REH impressively well. :)
I'm not even going to try. I will say that "thews" and any form of it is archaic and tended to be used in the days when Howard was writing. Of course it was also used by those trying to imitate him.
Paul, Ty did his homework.:)
Bernard, cool.
James, yeah, the imitators used some of Howard's words but usually did not have his cumulative vocabulary.
I have no idea. Did he really pivot buttocks? :)
riot kitty. apparently he did
Charles-Lord, do I need a writing class!
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