Book Review: ‘Shadows in Zamboula’ by Robert E. Howard
by Rob Smith, Jr. on Jun.19, 2021, under Books
Shadows in Zamboula by Robert E. Howard
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
This is a tale I read in the ‘Savage Sword of Conan’ a good 4 decades ago. It was illustrated by Neal Adams (and his Crusty Bunkers) and inked by Tony Dezuniga. I had an opportunity, a couple years after reading the magazine to buy an original page of the illustrated story. I did so for a tiny price, later selling it after a divorce.
Now I’ve read the actual story by Howard. The comic adaption is very faithful and very well written. This is better written, but a bit muddled in palaces that the comics adaption cleans up. Howard kinda over ran his headlights with this one and I guess that was due to his incredible speed, deadlines and need of cash. Still far better crafted than most written today.
The use of Conan is more as a pawn to handle the MaGuffin involved, though that is not revealed until later. Howard’s use of other characters is so very good. I’m filing through this collection of his stories and look forward to his writing of detective and westerns stories.
I have to add a note of other reviewers mentioning “racial stereotypes”. What on earth are they writing of? This story is note of this earth or earthlings. Howard conjured all involved. Skin color is only for adjectives, not of some imagined connection to earthly beings. The imagining itself is seeking boogy men where they don’t exist, except for want of them to exist.
Again, this is my fascination with Howard. I’m not much for the genre, but am stirred by this fantasy world he has made up. He went nearly no where, relied on books to know more of the ideas of geography and the world. Then used his own backyard as the setting of this other setting for Conan. Quite something!
Bottom line: I recommend this book. 8 out of ten points.