Here are Robert E. Howard's greatest horror tales, all in their
original, definitive versions.
Some of Howard's best-known characters--Solomon Kane, Bran Mak Morn, and
sailor Steve Costigan among them--roam the forbidding locales of the
author's fevered imagination, from the swamps and bayous of the Deep
South to the fiend-haunted woods outside Paris to remote jungles in
Africa.
The collection includes Howard's masterpiece "Pigeons from Hell," which
Stephen King calls "one of the finest horror stories of [the
twentieth] century," a tale of two travelers who stumble upon the ruins
of a Southern plantation-and into the maw of its fatal secret. In "Black
Canaan" even the best warrior has little chance of taking down the evil
voodoo man with unholy powers-and none at all against his wily mistress,
the diabolical High Priestess of Damballah. In these and other lavishly
illustrated classics, such as the revenge nightmare "Worms of the Earth"
and "The Cairn on the Headland," Howard spins tales of unrelenting
terror, the legacy of one of the world's great masters of the macabre.