The danger of biographies is that once we take a deep look at the lives of people we admire (who reads books about people they hate?) we learn of their flaws. Last year I read about J.R.R. Tolkien, and while I love his work I think visiting with the man would have been tedious. Winston Churchill was the man of the hour, and probably would have had me hiding under my chair.
Few American literary figures are as misunderstood as Robert E. Howard, and yet having finished reading Mark Finn’s excellent biography I find that my general impression of Howard remains unchanged. The man’s personality was as big as Texas, and his insecurities as dark as a desert night. Howard’s iconic characters confronted evil without blinking and laughed at death. The human writer could not do the same.
I’ve written about REH in the past, but if you aren’t familiar with him, he’s the creator of Conan the Barbarian and other legendary pulp heroes. I’m rather partial to the stories of Solomon Kane, the insane Puritan avenger, myself. Howard lived from 1906 to 1936 and made his living as a writer. He wrote more than barbarian adventure stories, dabbling in poetry, historical fiction, and humorous westerns.
What I most appreciate about Finn’s book is that he places Howard in the historical context of Texas in the early 20th century. As a boy, he was immersed in the tall tale tradition and unconsciously made it his own. Finn takes his time analyzing this aspect of American folklore, which I enjoyed just as much as learning about Howard. There’s also a fair amount of US history, as Texas at that time was still volatile, with roughnecks following the oil boom from town to town. Howard hated authority, and he hated the establishment before it was cool.
Biographies can be dense and academic, so it’s only appropriate that one titled Blood and Thunder is not. It’s engrossing. Finn doesn’t worship his subject, simply attempting to show Howard as he really was, as only a fellow Texan can. While not a Texan myself, for me Howard’s strengths and flaws also make for a cautionary tale. The parallels between his life and mine get a little too disconcerting if I dwell on them for too long.
Maybe the best thing about honest biographies is that by understanding idols, we can avoid making the same mistakes.