"True Adventure" Stories
Title | First published | Alternative title(s) | Source text | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
The Block | Pay Day, 1986 | |||
The Curse of Greed | Fantasy Crosswinds #1, January 1977 | |||
The Devil in his Brain | Lurid Confessions #1, June 1986 | |||
Diogenes of Today | Red Blades of Black Cathay, 1971 | Written with Tevis Clyde Smith | ||
Le Gentil Homme le Diable | The Toreador, June 1925 | |||
The Heathen | The Howard Collector #13, Fall 1970 | |||
The Ideal Girl | The Tattler, the Brownwood High School paper, January 1925 | |||
The Loser | REH: Lone Star Fictioneer #1, Spring 1975 | |||
A Matter of Age | Lurid Confessions #1, June 1986 | |||
Midnight | The Junto, September 1929 | |||
Musings of a Moron | The Howard Collector #10, Spring 1968 | |||
Nerve | Pay Day, 1986 | |||
The Nut's Shell | Pay Day, 1986 | |||
Pay Day | Pay Day, 1986 | |||
Post Oaks & Sand Roughs | Post Oaks & Sand Roughs, 1990 | Semi-autobiographical | ||
The Sophisticate | Pay Day, 1986 | |||
The Stones of Destiny | Pulp Magazine #1, March 1989 | |||
Sunday in a Small Town | The Howard Collector #11, Spring 1969 | |||
A Touch of Color | Pay Day, 1986 | |||
The Voice of the Mob | Lurid Confessions #1, June 1986 | |||
Wild Water | The Vultures of Whapeton, 1975 |
Read more about this topic: Robert E. Howard Bibliography
Famous quotes containing the words true, adventure and/or stories:
“I perceived that to express those impressions, to write that essential book, which is the only true one, a great writer does not, in the current meaning of the word, invent it, but, since it exists already in each one of us, interprets it. The duty and the task of a writer are those of an interpreter.”
—Marcel Proust (18711922)
“An adventure is only an inconvenience rightly considered. An inconvenience is only an adventure wrongly considered.”
—Gilbert Keith Chesterton (18741936)
“Reporters are not paid to operate in retrospect. Because when news begins to solidify into current events and finally harden into history, it is the stories we didnt write, the questions we didnt ask that prove far, far more damaging than the ones we did.”
—Anna Quindlen (b. 1952)