» Sat May 07, 2011 1:58 am
I was overjoyed when I read that Todd was a fan of Conan. I know he also mentioned it influencing Morrowind, but since he mentioned Gladiator in the same breath (which is also good) I assumed he meant the movies, which while fun, don't portray the original character.
The OP made a mistake I think, though, in referring it to high fantasy. I'm fairly certain it's low fantasy, as in magic is rare and mixed with real or at least debatable phenomena like medicine and ESP, monsters are usually prehistoric holdovers, like dinosaurs for dragons, pre-humans for trolls and orgres etc.
What most people don't know is that what has become a simple cliche was actually some of the earliest fantasy writing. The first Conan story was published in 1932, as opposed to the Hobbit in 1937. Howard also wrote plenty of "lore" to flesh out his characters, stretching across aeons, describing the rise and fall of civilizations and the evolution of entire species and races.
Most people here have touched on the complexity that actually existed in the character, even if the writing style was simplistic compared to Tolkien. But Tolkien was a professor, and Howard was a boxer. He wrote his stories to contain all the momentum of a fist fight (or sword fight). He was also a contemporary and pen pal of Lovecraft, who is above the reading level of most fantasy authors today. I've tried other authors like Fritz Lieber (which is high fantasy) and although enjoyable, they just seem forced and fanciful. It's hard to visualize stories that are dripping with their own mythology so much that everything does become cliche, and the world seems much more connected and modern despite the setting, just because of how people talk and act, like they've got a telegraph connected to the evil wizards tower, or every kingdom over the horizon.