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Paperback Chronicles of Conan Volume 10: When Giants Walk the Earth and Other Stories Book

ISBN: 1593074905

ISBN13: 9781593074906

Chronicles of Conan Volume 10: When Giants Walk the Earth and Other Stories

(Part of the Conan the Barbarian (1970-1993) Series and The Chronicles of Conan (#10) Series)

The latest collection of previously unavailable Conan adventures! The unstoppable Conan returns in another pile-driving selection of stories. These classic tales are newly available after more than a quarter of a century.

Recommended

Format: Paperback

Condition: Very Good

$30.29
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Customer Reviews

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Conan and Belit on the road to serpent-riddled Luxor and Thoth-Amon

"Chronicles of Conan, Volume 10: When Giants Walk the Earth and Other Stories," reprints issues #72-77 and 79-82 from "Conan the Barbarian." The gap in the continuity is issue #78, which reprinted "Curse of the Undead-Man" from "Savage Sword of Conan" #1, which teams up Conan and Red Sonja, albeit now in color. This is the point in the chronology of the character where Roy Thomas is milking the epic Conan story "Queen of the Black Coast" by Robert E. Howard for all it is worth. Conan first joined up with Belit in issue #58 and it would not be until #100 that we got to the death of the she-pirate and the end of the story. What made this work so well for the comic book was that Thomas was coming up with multi-part stories as key elements of the larger story. What we have here is one of the major stories within that epic, where Belit finds out that her father is still alive and wants to go rescue him. But in these ten issues Conan and Belit only get as far as starting to travel up the River Styx. Once they begin their travel there is an adventure in Harakht (#75-77) and a side trip that Conan has to take without Belit (#79-81). All of the stories are written by Thomas and inked by Ernie Chan, but the first set of reprints are penciled by John Buscema while guest illustrator Howard Chaykin shows up for the second storyline. "Vengeance in Asgalun" (#72) begins with Conan, Belit and the Black Corsairs raiding a Shemite merchant vessel, but then heading to the royal palace at Asgalun to fetch a vial with a special herb to help old N'yaga's bones heal. There Conan and Belit pretend to be a bickering husband and wife to be able to get the vial. But along the way Belit learns that her father is alive and supposedly in Luxor. "He Who Waits--in the Well of Skelos!" (#73), freely adopted from a plot by Howard, starts off with the cowardly Kawaku, making his move against Conan and Belit to take over the pirate ship "Tigress." So Conan leads the traitor to the Temple of the Toad, knowing full well what is waiting in the Well of Skelos. "The Battle at the Black Walls" (#74) has Conan coming face-to-face with Thoth-Amon, albeit in a dream and is shown the "Tigress" burning at sea. Belit also has a dream that night, but it is of her father. When they raid a Stygian ship, its last defend walks forward onto Conan's words rather than tell what he knows of Luxor. They find a Zingarian girl named Neftha aboard, and she helps guide them on the long and dangerous road to Luxor. "The Hawk-Riders of Harakht!" (#75) certainly strikes me as owing a dept to the tarnsman aspect of John Norman's novels about the counter-Earth named Gor, as our trio travel up the River Styx and encounter archers riding on giant hawks who attack the trade ship they are on from the skies. When one of the giant birds takes Belit, Conan tries to follow on another, only to edge up in a crocodile infested marshland fighting for his life. "Swordless in Stygia" (#76) finds Conan

conan rules

rule 1 thank dark horse comics for reprinting these classics. rule 2 buy these trades. rule 3 ENJOY

CONAN'S CONTINUING ADVENTURES WITH BELIT

Conan Volume 10 "When Giants Walk the Earth" is the latest collection which reprints the original Conan the Barbarian series from Marvel Comics. Included in this edition are issues # 72 - 77, 79 -82. As this book opens, Conan is continuing his adventures with the she-devil Belit and her black corsairs. In "Vengeance in Asgalun" Belit and Conan must go to the city state of Asgalun, which is also Belit's home' to find a hidden elixir to save the shaman N'Yaga. While there Belit discovers that her father whom she thought dead may be still alive. Conan's arch nemesis, the Stygian Wizard Thoth-Amon makes an appearance in "Battle of the Black Walls" as he appears to Conan in a dream and warns him to give up the quest to find Belit's father. Conan ignores the threats as he, Belit, and a Zingaran slave girl sneak into the Stygian city of Khemi and travel down the river Styx on a merchant ship where they are attacked by the Hawk Riders of Hor-Neb and Belit is carried off by the giant hawks. Conan attempts to rescue Belit but is thrown into a pit with a massive giant and discovers the secret which made the Hawks and this man grow so large. The last few issues in the book are an adaptation of a Robert E. Howard story called "The Lost Valley of Iskander". This was not an actual Conan story but an El-Borak story. El Borak was the middle Eastern name for Francis Xavier Gordon, a mercenary and adventurer, circa the 20's and 30's who traveled throughout the middle east. Howard wrote several El-Borak stories and Roy Thomas ties this into Conan chronology by having the ruler of the Khemi send Conan on a diplomatic mission to the lost valley and the city of Attalus. The adaptation comes off pretty well as most of Howard's heroes were pretty similar in their make. As usual the wonderful John Buscema handles the penciling chores on most of the issues along with the stellar embellishments of Ernie Chan. "The Lost Valley of Iskander" was drawn by Howard Chaykin also with inks by Chan. Whether intentionally or due to Chan's inks, Chaykin's art ends up looking a lot like Buscema's. Thomas had a great affinity for Belit, obviously as he extended her stay with Conan from an initial short story by Howard into a comics run that lasted a over three years and spanned some 42 issues until her death in the classic Conan #100. As with the other Conan collections Roy Thomas provides commentary about the various issues in the run including his freely adapted version of "The Lost Valley of Iskander". Great insight from Roy as always and why not...he was there when these were all being created. Another strong volume from Dark Horse. Reviewed by Tim Janson
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