Robert E
@Pulp Fiction Writer, Birthday and Facts
Robert E
Robert E. Howard born at
He was in a relationship with Novalyne Price and they dated on and off. However, he did not give her much attention due to his mother’s ill health. She later dated his best friend, Truett Vinson.
All through his life it is believed that he suffered from mental illnesses and depression. This was speculated as one of the reasons for his later suicide. It was also speculated that he suffered from Oedipal complex.
After hearing of his mother’s coma and being told that she will not recover from it, he shot himself in the head on June 11, 1936. He was 30 years old at the time of his death. Some speculate that his suicide was due to stress and not any form of mental illness.
Robert E. Howard was born on January 22, 1906 to travelling country physician, Dr. Isaac Mordecai Howard and Hester Jane Ervin Howard in Peaster, Texas. Due to his father’s work profile, he travelled and resided in several of parts of Texas in his early life.
His mother played a significant role in his intellectual growth and inculcated in him a passion for literature and poetry. Though he was a voracious reader, he loathed attending school.
Since he was nine years old, he developed interest in writing and dreamt of becoming a writer. He had by this time authored several short stories and historical fiction.
Other than writing, he was deeply passionate about boxing, which at that time was an immensely popular sport. It was one of his passions and he soon trained himself as an amateur in the sport.
His first professional outing as a writer was for the pulp magazine, ‘Weird Tales’. The story ‘Spear and Fang’, after facing too many rejections, was finally accepted by the magazine and earned him $16, his first ever self-earned money.
In 1926, he went on to complete a course on bookkeeping and the same year he began to work on his piece of writing titled, ‘The Shadow Kingdom’. This later became one of his best works.
In August 1928, his story ‘Red Shadows’ was published in the pulp fiction magazine, ‘Weird Tales’. This was later alternatively titled, ‘Solomon Kane’.
In August 1929, his story ‘The Shadow Kingdom’ was published for the first time in the pulp magazine, ‘Weird Tales’. The plot was set in the fictional world of the ‘Thurian Age’.
Later in the year 1929, his story titled, ‘The Apparition in the Prize Ring’ was published in the ‘Ghost Series’ magazine. This was one of his first pieces to be published in another magazine than ‘Weird Tales’. In July 1929, one of his stories titled, ‘Crowd-Horror’ was published in the ‘Argosy’.
He was the mastermind behind the legendary fictional character, ‘Conan the Barbarian’. This character has been adapted into several comics and books, even video games and cartoons. The character also inspired the films, ‘Conan the Barbarian’ and ‘Conan the Destroyer’.