Tuesday, June 8, 2010
posted by Al Harron

The original Four Cimmerians: Mark Finn, Leo Grin, Steve Tompkins and Rob Roehm
“You are free to start whenever you want. No rules or regulations, just go for it. Any news items that crop up on the lists should be posted, as well as any new Howard projects or gossip. You can comment on your new REHupa, can muse a bit about some story or letter you’ve read recently, can review new books and products from others. Any other fantasy, Texan, or other related writers can be discussed, keeping in mind that Howard should at least ostensibly remain the focus of the blog.”
– Leo Grin, email, June 2006
Leo Grin set out the rules almost from the beginning. Though the Man from Cross Plains would remain “at least ostensibly” the focus, The Cimmerian web log was not only about Robert E. Howard. As early as the fourth post, signs of its broadening scope were appearing, and within its second year, it had truly become “A Website and Shieldwall for Robert E. Howard, J.R.R. Tolkien, and the Best in Heroic Fantasy, Horror, and Historical Adventure.”
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Tuesday, June 8, 2010
posted by Miguel Martins

Last year, Bill Thom won the first Munsey Award, given “to a deserving person who has given of himself or herself for the betterment of the pulp community, be it through disseminating knowledge about the pulps or through publishing or other efforts to preserve and to foster interest in the pulp magazines we all love and enjoy” for his hard work on Coming Attractions, an indispensable resource on Pulp-related news that I peruse each week and where I found dozens of news items to announce on The Cimmerian these last six months. This year, essayist (and Cimmerian journal-contributor) Don Herron is nominated. Don Herron authored several seminal pieces on Robert E. Howard –you can read Brian Murphy’s appreciation of Don’s “milestones in Howard studies” here on the Cimmerian blog.
Besides his literary criticism about the Bard of Cross Plains, Don Herron is also an authority on Dashiell Hammett, Charles Willeford, Philip K. Dick and the Emperor of Dreams, Clark Ashton Smith. He created the Dashiell Hammet Tour in 1977 and has lead Hammett aficionados through San Francisco every year since then.
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Tuesday, June 8, 2010
posted by Deuce Richardson

TC editors advertising (I refuse to use the term “pimping”) their personal literary items for sale has a long history here on the blog. Check out this post by Leo Grin (and several subsequent).
Times are dire here in serpent-haunted SEK. Musing on such, a decision was reached by yours truly. Time to lighten the load for the journey into the future.
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Tuesday, June 8, 2010
posted by Miguel Martins

Since he seems to be too humble to mention it himself here, I will do it for him; our own Cimmerian blogger William Patrick Maynard has announced that he has fully-executed agreement from the Sax Rohmer Literary Estate to write a second novel featuring Rohmer’s evil doctor. It will be entitled The Destiny of Fu Manchu.
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Tuesday, June 8, 2010
posted by Barbara Barrett
THE SHIPS OF HY-BRASIL
Part 2 of 2
In Part 1 of “The Ships of Hy-Brasil” we learned that Howard’s poem “The Isle of Hy-Brasil” is more than a historical narration of this island and its myth. As stated previously, “Isle” essentially describes the many types of ships anchored along its shores. To envision the beauty of this ancient island shoreline when lined with these ships, pictures of each ship type as well as a description have been added below. The ships discussed in Part 1 include the galleon, the coracle, the trireme, the galley, an ancient barge-boat, and the pirate ships: the brigantine, the caravel, the carrack and finally the frigate. Part 2 begins with the bireme.
And there’s a sturdy bireme that sailed to the Holy Land.

The Bireme
The Bireme is a galley type ship with two bank of oars that was especially used by the Greeks and Phoenicians. The ship had a hull of wood and was used for both shipping and naval warfare possibly as early as 350 bc It was configured with a single square rigged sail, short mast. The two banks of oars provided man-powered propulsion in case of calm waters or for better control in battles. The bronze armored ram on the bow of the ship was designed to be driven deep into an enemy ship. In addition to the small number of crew required, there could hold as many as 45 sailors during combat as well as additional fighting men on the main deck who were ready to board enemy vessels that had been rammed. Top speed was approximately seven knots.
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Monday, June 7, 2010
posted by Keith Taylor

Having sent in postings on Uther and some other Arthurian characters — and written stories based on the King Arthur mythos myself — I’d like to pay tribute to the sources that did most to make me an addict of those very legends. The fascination began when I was just a kid, with the classic Howard Pyle’s King Arthur and His Knights, the now legendary (in itself) comic strip Prince Valiant, which among other distinctions showed here and there that it owed something to Lord Dunsany, and continued into my teens when I discovered, and read over and over, Le Morte d’Arthur by Malory.
There was Edison Marshal’s excellent The Pagan King.
And there was, unforgettably, Rosemary Sutcliff. She wrote some fantasy, retelling famous legends (Beowulf’s story in Dragon Slayer, Cuchulainn’s and Finn’s in The Hound of Ulster and The High Deeds of Finn mac Cool). She also dealt with Arthurian legend in a number of books. The Light Beyond the Forest retells the search for the Holy Grail by Lancelot, Galahad, Bors and Perceval. The Sword and the Circle recounts Arthur’s birth, youth and early years as king. The Road to Camlann tells with a steadily darkening tone the treachery of Mordred, the breach between Arthur, Lancelot and Guinevere, and the final battle.
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Monday, June 7, 2010
posted by Barbara Barrett
The Word of the Week Blog has appeared on The Cimmerian Blog each Monday since August 3, 2009. In May 2010, the format was slightly changed to include a monthly theme. In the May introduction, it was mentioned the theme in June would be ships. Unfortunately, WotW will only post once this month. However, to fulfill that promise here is a two-part article on “The Ships of Hy-Brasil” from my February 2010 REHupa mailing based on the Robert E. Howard poem, “The Isle of Hy-Brasil.” These will be the last two postings for Word of the Week on TC. Enjoy!
THE SHIPS OF HY-BRASIL
Part 1 of 2
In his poem, the “Isle of Hy-Brasil,” Robert E. Howard brings to life the fabled isle that existed even when the pre-historical islands of Atlantis and Lemuria were still afloat in the Atlantic and Pacific oceans. The isle, also known as Brazil, Hy-Brazil, and several other variants, is steeped in Irish myth. According to legend, it is a phantom island cloaked in mist, except for one day each seven years when it becomes visible but still unattainable. Similar in myth to that of St. Brendan’s Island [spelled Brandon in the poem], it is shown as being circular, often with a central strait or river running east-west across its diameter. Despite failure in the attempts to find Hy-Brasil/St. Brendan’s Island, it appeared regularly on maps lying southwest of Galway Bay from 1325 until 1865.
Howard’s poem “The Isle of Hy-Brasil” is more than a historical narration of this island and its myth. It essentially describes the many types of ships anchored along its shores. To envision the beauty of this ancient island shoreline when lined with these ships, pictures of each ship type as well as a description have been added below.
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Monday, June 7, 2010
posted by Al Harron

The Cimmerian had lost many of its leading voices on the road to its final year. Rob Roehm & Mark Finn went on to pastures new, Steve Tompkins departed to the Worlds Beyond Death, and Leo Grin was fading ever quicker from the realm of Howardom. Deuce Richardson and the bloggers had a formidable legacy to live up to, and they were determined to carry on the tradition of those giants in Howard scholarship.
The Cimmerian blog’s final year boasted new faces and new ideas, but was ever conscious of its mission.
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Sunday, June 6, 2010
posted by William Maynard

“Andaman—Second!” was the seventh installment of Sax Rohmer’s serial, Fu-Manchu first published in THE STORY-TELLER in April 1913. The story would later comprise Chapters 18-20 of the novel, The Mystery of Dr. Fu-Manchu (re-titled The Insidious Dr. Fu-Manchu for U.S. publication). Rohmer returned the series to its Holmesian roots by mining Sir Arthur Conan Doyle’s “The Adventure of the Bruce-Partington Plans” for inspiration. Conan Doyle’s case concerns stolen submarine plans taken from Cadogan West while Rohmer’s story involves stolen aero-torpedo plans taken from Norris West. “The Adventure of the Bruce-Partington Plans” was published in 1912, just a few months before Rohmer wrote “Andaman—Second!” and shows that Sherlock Holmes was still very much a model for the Fu-Manchu series at this early stage. (Continue reading this post)
Sunday, June 6, 2010
posted by Jeffrey Shanks

As most of you probably know by now, The Cimmerian blog will be coming to an end on June 11. Both the original print journal and the blog version have been integral parts of Howard fandom and scholarship during this first decade of the twenty-first century and I am honored and humbled to have had a very tiny place in that legacy.
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