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REVIEW: Book-And-Record Set Adapted for Conan #116

“In Marvel’s first Conan outing in over a decade without legendary scribe Roy Thomas, we encounter a tale of Conan as a desert captive. Rasto, a wandering nomad, has captured the Cimmerian and intends to sell him at the slave market in Shadizar. But our barbarian’s captivity will not last long…”

(EDITOR’S NOTE: Welcome to The Classic Conan Countdown, a series of reviews focusing on the original 275 issues of Marvel Comics’ Conan the Barbarian, which were published from 1970 to 1993. This is a review of Conan the Barbarian (Vol. 1) #116.)

By WALLY MONK – Paint Monk’s Library Editor

One would think that the absence of fantasy’s most prominent comic book writer would have warranted some fanfare (or perhaps a eulogy) from Marvel Comics at the time. Instead, the first issue where Roy Thomas is not at the writing helm has an interesting – and rather unusual – history.

The story, written by Len Wein and J.M. DeMatteis, was originally part of a book and record set by Power Records in 1976. The company put out a large number of these, which include a comic book and a 45 RPM record, telling kids “It’s fun to read as you hear! The ACTION comes alive!” 

Conan the Barbarian #116 and the Book-And-Record Set from which it was adapted.

Conan wasn’t the only comic book character to get the book-and-record treatment. Other properties included Spider-Man, the Fantastic Four, (Tomb of) Dracula, Space: 1999, Frankenstein, Man-Thing, Star Trek, Justice League of America and Batman. 

Some major changes were made to the comic book; pages 1-3 were added and drawn by John Buscema. Pages 4-22 were taken from the book and record set and were drawn by Buscema and Neal Adams. 

“The Crawler in the Mists!” wasn’t the only Conan story to receive the book-and-record treatment. A larger 33 1/2 RPM album (pictured above) was made containing FOUR classic Conan stories, with Crawler included. For those of you who enjoy reading comics with commentary, I’ve included the videos below to all of the stories on YouTube (full audio.) Engage your inner child, dig Conan the Barbarian #116 out of your long box, and follow along! 

REVIEW: Conan the Barbarian (Vol. 1) #116

This tale begins with an all too familiar scene – Conan is on his horse riding through the desert, when the horse is spooked by a venomous snake lying in wait in the sand. As the horse throws Conan, the viper bites him, and we’re treated to a full page of Conan trying to suck the venom from the wound to no avail – the Cimmerian collapses and all fades to black.  

Conan awakens on the back of a camel, chained to a wiry man named Rasto. When Conan inquires where he is going, Rasto informs him that Conan is his slave. He’s bound for the market in Shadizar, City of the Wicked, where Conan will bring a tidy sum on the slave block. Whatever in the world made this tiny little man think that chaining himself to Conan was a bright idea remains to be seen.

Rasto’s plan – obviously – turns out to be not so sharp as Conan yanks the merchant off his horse and makes short work of the remaining caravan members. Soon, it’s Conan and Rasto (whom Conan calls “little worm”) wandering through the desert on the back of a lone camel. The merchant tells Conan that he’ll be on his way once he’s freed from the chain that binds the two together – but Conan says the only way is to take off Rasto’s wrist. The merchant, of course, declines Conan’s generous offer.  

They finally arrive at a city called Kamalla, where Conan inquires of a local villager where he might find a blacksmith to break apart the chain which binds him to Rasto. The villager tells him to leave the city while he still can. 

As the duo continues making their way through the city, they find doors slammed and windows being closed as they ride through town. Conan eventually decides to bed down for the night in the town square, since no one offers to open their doors to the Cimmerian and his companion. 

Conan is jerked awake in the middle of the night by a monstrous force and the screaming of Rasto, who has been grabbed by what seems to be a giant slug! Rasto is pulled away from Conan with so much force that the chain binding them is snapped in two, like thread.

As Conan tries to fight the giant slug, it slithers off into darkness and rising mists which begin to fill the town. Soon, Conan loses sight of the creature, but another takes its place, attacking the barbarian.  

Conan wastes no time, attacking the second slug-beast with his sword, only to discover the slug’s hide is as hard as a diamond! Finding a loose column, Conan manages to force the monolith down on top of the creature, ending its life.

With the second slug dead, Conan follows the sound of shuffling and Rasto’s voice, only to find the old merchant held in the slug’s embrace. As Conan moves to the attack, Rasto calls out that the Cimmerian mustn’t harm the creature, as he doesn’t understand what it is doing.  

Conan, confused, continues to attack, but is interrupted by a voice thundering in his mind, paralyzing him where he stands. The slug is a wizard named M’Najj, a great sorcerer from another dimension. The slug Conan slew was his mate. Apparently, the two traveled to Hyboria from their own dimension, taking the old and infirm of Kamallah to repopulate their own dimension. There, the humans were given new and peaceful lives. Conan watches as Rasto is sent to this dimension, and sees the merchant with a new, healthy body, approaching a paradise of which he could only dream. 

M’Najj tells the troubled Conan that since he is a barbaric, dangerous creature, he has no room in this new world. Sadly, the barbarian rides, “leaving the gates of paradise and the city in the desert far behind him.”  

CAPSULE REVIEW: This was a good issue, and the record that accompanied the earlier release is of high quality. I’d recommend picking up the book-and-record version if you can. While many old themes are borrowed for this issue, it’s certainly clear that Conan would remain a viable hero for Marvel, despite the change in writing teams.

The art remains good, and if you weren’t a regular reader, you probably wouldn’t notice many changes.

On a scale of 1-10, I’d rate this issue a 7.5. On eBay, copies of this issue (the regular series) were available for less than $10. Copies of the book and record set ranged from $9.99 to $24.99 depending on condition.  

As always, I am – Wally (AKA Paint Monk)

REVIEW: Thomas’ “Goodbye” Marks 10th Anniversary

“As Conan pines for his lost love Belit, two old adversaries are preparing for a showdown. The wizard Zukala wishes to enlist the Cimmerian’s aid to defeat his long-time foe Karanthes … and as part of the bargain, the conjurer claims that Belit will come to life once more. Will the She-Pirate live again, to one day sit next to Conan on his jeweled throne?”

(EDITOR’S NOTE: Welcome to The Classic Conan Countdown, a series of reviews focusing on the original 275 issues of Marvel Comics’ Conan the Barbarian, which were published from 1970 to 1993. This is a review of Conan the Barbarian (Vol. 1) #115.)

By WALLY MONK – Paint Monk’s Library Editor

How I missed reading Conan the Barbarian #115 when it was on the newsstand is beyond me. It is a fantastic issue, full of references to the last 114 issues, and a fitting swan song for Roy Thomas’ departure from the title for the next 125 monthly installments.

It’s also interesting to note that Conan the Barbarian #115 marks Conan’s 10th Anniversary as a Marvel Comics licensed property. To a lesser but by no means insignificant extent, this means the scribes here at Paint Monk’s Library have reviewed a decade worth of Conan comics in less than a year and a half.

A huge shout out to librarians past and present, especially Bob Freeman and Andy Maglothin, who have stayed along for the ride and continue to make this Classic Conan Countdown event possible.

This issue is chock full of references to Thomas’ earlier stories and includes Red Sonja as a major character. The interactions between Conan and Sonja are almost as important to the development of each character as the main story itself.

In honor of Conan the Barbarian’s 10th Anniversary at Marvel – and this hallmark issue – today’s review will be longer and double-sized, just like the actual comic. It’s a bittersweet tale, and made more so by the knowledge that Thomas’ successors will struggle often trying to keep the magic of Howard’s Hyborian Age alive.

Review: Conan the Barbarian (Vol. 1) #115

Conan is en route to Akkharia, where he hopes to enlist as a soldier in the army of the king. It has been a long time since his last “paid” adventure, and the barbarian’s purse is empty. On the road, Conan is interrupted by a ghostly vision and an adversary from his past.

Zukala, the wizard last seen in Conan the Barbarian #14-15, wants Conan to abandon his journey to Akkharia and take on a mission for him. He assures the barbarian that he will have more than he could ever dream of in reward for his assistance. Angry, and determined to never serve a wizard, Conan throws his blade at the spectre of Zukala and rides on his way, grabbing his sword from the tree in which it lodged after passing through the ghostly visage.

Approaching the walled city, Conan muses on how it reminds him of Asgalun, the home to his lost love Belit. He pines for a moment, and then enters Akkharia.

It’s late at night, and there’s no room at the inn for our barbarian. The innkeeper, awakened from his slumber, tells Conan that for a silver piece he can sleep in the stable.

Tired and in desperate need of rest, Conan accepts the humble lodgings, only to find there’s another warrior sound asleep – and snoring – when he arrives. It’s no deterrent, and soon Conan the Cimmerian is asleep himself.

Conan awakens in the morning to a familiar voice – it seems the fiery Red Sonja also plans to work for the king, and she was his snoring bunk-mate. She tells the barbarian all she’s had is “an empty purse and saddle-sores” since they last met. The Hyrkanian offers Conan one final breakfast before the duo sign their services over to the king.

The visit to the inn is where things get interesting. Red Sonja begins to prod Conan about Belit and her absence. When Conan decides not to engage Sonja in this particular conversation, the redheaded warrior pushes on, going as far as telling Conan that Belit probably left him for “a tree-ape with bigger muscles and a smaller brain” and that he’s “better off without her.”

Conan’s response is brutal.

A sword fight ensues, as Sonja continues to taunt Conan and he spars back, both verbally and with his blade. Sonja tells him to hold still, and that any other man would be dead by now – Conan responds by telling her that perhaps she would be better off putting down the sword and having children.

As Sonja seemingly loses the combat, her sword falling down to the floor, she pulls a dagger with which she plans to continue the battle. Conan turns away, saying that he won, and that she can stab him in the back if she wishes. Author Thomas notes that of this fight, “some people will say there was wine spilled on the floor where Sonja stood” and that was the reason she lost the confrontation.

Conan reminds Sonja of her vow – and soon the Cimmerian is taking her to his room. Dejected, yet honoring her promise not to love a man until he has bested her in combat, Sonja allows Conan to carry her upstairs.

As Conan gently prepares for some personal time with the fiery redhead, Sonja appears dejected. She acknowledges her vow, but also tells Conan that she’s “not required to enjoy it.” Conan rebukes Sonja, who once again brings up Belit. The barbarian then tells her he thought she was smart enough to figure out that Belit was dead.

An angry Cimmerian stalks out of the room, telling a shocked Red Sonja that he still cares about Belit and her coldness has reminded him that he’s not ready for another romantic encounter at the moment.

Conan leaves Akkharia – and Red Sonja – behind, abruptly mounting his horse and galloping away. He finds another city, another tavern and more wenches. But it’s not what he wants at the moment. Frustrated, the barbarian steps out into the rain – only to encounter the spectre of Zukala again.

Now, Zukala makes Conan an offer he cannot refuse – if the Cimmerian brings him the Stygian wizard-priest of Ibis, Karanthes (first seen in Conan the Barbarian #7), Zukala will restore Belit to life.

Conan accepts Zukala’s offer. But he will soon discover that Red Sonja is now in the employ of Karanthes – and they will meet again soon.

Will Belit walk beside Conan once more? Will Red Sonja win the next sword-duel with Conan, if one occurs? And what will happen when Karanthes meets his nemesis Zukala face to face?

CAPSULE REVIEW: There’s so much to enjoy in this issue that it’s hard to put a finger on what is best and what needs work. We see flashbacks to many aspects of Conan’s adventuring career thus far – we hear of the Living Tarim, Belit, Karanthes, and even Melnibone and Conan’s adventures with Elric. It’s almost as if Roy Thomas wants to imagine all that has been and all he’s leaving behind as he walks away from Conan the Barbarian after this issue.

This comic book is a prime example of John Buscema’s supremacy as a Conan illustrator. The facial expressions on Conan and Red Sonja’s face tell as much of a story as Thomas’ words. Sonja’s downtrodden face upon learning she will need to surrender her body to Conan is eerie – you genuinely feel for her and the mental dilemma in which she’s been placed.

Typically, I provide a complete synopsis in most of my Classic Conan Countdown reviews, but you need to read this issue yourself. I will leave you with the final image of Red Sonja from the comic, who rejects Conan’s offer to be his new adventuring companion. It appears that she does and may perhaps harbor some genuine feelings for the Cimmerian after all.

Are those tears in Sonja’s eyes as she parts ways with Conan?

On a scale of 1-10, I’d rate this issue a 9.0. It’s all down hill from here, sadly, as Conan the Barbarian #116 introduces us to the writing of J.M. DeMatteis, a talented scribe in his own right, but one who never seems to grasp the nuances of our Cimmerian hero.

As always, I am – Wally (AKA Paint Monk)

COMIC-WATCH: Dreadlands Full Of Great Art, Old Tropes

By WALLY MONK – Paint Monk’s Library Editor

Back in 2017, when I began blogging about comic books and started Paint Monk’s Library, I was an occasional feature writer and fill-in news-hound for a relatively new site called Comic-Watch.

My stint there was a remarkably short one. However, when I learned early last month that some changes had been made in editorial and ownership, I inquired about the possibility of tackling an occasional feature again.

A special thanks to John Jack and editor Cody White – my first Sunday Classics feature in over two years ran this past weekend on the Comic-Watch platform. I hope to contribute these Sunday features occasionally in addition to my primary duties here at the Library.

If you’re a fan of great dinosaur art, Epic’s Dreadlands (1992) is worth checking out.

INTERVIEW: Don Glut – Revisiting Gold Key Classics

“If you remember the days of Gold Key Comics, Donald Glut is a name you should know. He created The Occult Files of Doctor Spektor, Dagar the Invincible, and Tragg and the Sky Gods. He’s also a successful filmmaker, amateur paleontologist, and novel writer. His time at Marvel and DC Comics included writing in DC horror anthologies and writing fan favorites like The Invaders, Captain America and Ghost Rider. You can read some of Don’s most recent work in the pages of The Creeps, a horror anthology in the spirit of Warren’s Creepy and Eerie magazines, to which he regularly contributes.”

By WALLY MONK – Paint Monk’s Library Editor

Donald F. Glut is a man of many faces and equally as many talents. He’s a successful motion picture director, writer, comic book creator and pop culture entrepreneur. If you’re a fan of dinosaurs, he’s got plenty of books and independent films to his credit in the prehistoric genre.

If you love swords and sorcery, Don was the creator of Dagar the Invincible, Tragg and the Sky Gods and the horror series The Occult Files of Doctor Spektor for Gold Key Comics. He’s written episodes of my favorite childhood show – Land of the Lost (and many others) – and he wrote stories for Marvel’s Savage Sword of Conan featuring Solomon Kane and Kull the Destroyer. Don received the coveted Inkpot Award in 1980 from Comic-Con International and he’s also well-known for his novelization of the 1980 Star Wars film The Empire Strikes Back.

Truth be told, his resume is so comprehensive that I could fill dozens of posts with the work he’s done in the film, comic book and writing industries.

Don agreed to an email interview with Paint Monk’s Library about his time with Gold Key Comics on Tragg and the Sky Gods, Dagar the Invincible and Doctor Spektor with a few questions about his time on Savage Sword of Conan and his storied movie career mixed in.

(In all fairness to Don – whose work I respect tremendously – I have been working on formatting and editing this interview for some time. It was completed in early 2019 – but I didn’t have the time to add sidebars, do my due diligence, and properly format it until now. Thank you, Don, for your immense amount of patience.)

WALLY MONK

So all of my interviews start back at the beginning. With so hefty a resume, much of your work seems to entail dinosaurs, the horror genre, swords and sorcery, and science fiction. When did you enter into this world of fantasy and creativity, and how old were you?

DON GLUT

“When I was a very young kid, say prior to about six years old, I was mostly into trains and cowboys. Of course, like all kids in the late 1940s, I loved Disney movies, cartoons in general, fairy tales, etc. And I always had an affection for the Superman character. My first awareness of dinosaurs began when I was about four or five years old and my mom took me to the Chicago Natural History Museum (now called the Field Museum) and I saw my first fossil skeletons. My interest in science fiction began when at a Cub Scout den meeting I saw something on TV that totally captured my imagination. It was a chapter of the first Flash Gordon movie serial. Instantly I was hooked!

The author’s early influences? Flash Gordon, dino fossils and EC horror comics.

As to monsters and horror, my first significant exposure to those were the movies I saw on TV and in theatres, especially the old Universal Frankenstein, Dracula and Wolf Man pictures; and also the pre-Code horror comic books, mostly the ECs and Dick Briefer’s Frankenstein.

I’ve never particularly liked sword and sorcery, even though over the years I would write a lot of it. Of course, I’d seen movies that were almost in that vein, like the Italian Hercules and Maciste films, but I think my first exposure to actual S&S, as we usually define it, were some of the stories about Dax the Warrior appearing in the Warren horror comic magazines. But as I said, that genre never much appealed to me.”

WALLY MONK

You are heavily into film making and are credited with over 40 films during your younger years and time as what the ‘zines call an “amateur filmmaker”. Many of these films were based on comic book characters. Did you foresee the jump into comic book writing, was that the eventual goal, or just an extension of what you were doing in your films? And did any of your ideas for films ever get incorporated into your comic book writing?

DON GLUT

“I made 41 of those amateur movies, starting what would become my main hobby at the age of nine, and to date eight professional feature-length films, most recently Dances with Werewolves and Tales of Frankenstein through my company Pecosborn Productions. And yes, a good number of the featured comic book characters, including Superman, Spider-Man, Captain America, The Shadow and The Spirit. No, I never – at least back then – thought of those movies as leading to anything, like comic book writing or making professional films.

A documentary about Don Glut’s amateur films contains all 41 of the productions as “extras”.

That was, after all, Chicago, where most people, at least the ones I have known over many years, tended to regard such things as writing, art, music, acting etc. as hobbies rather than professions. I initially started making those films not because I wanted to be a film-maker, but because I wanted to show monster etc. films anytime I wanted to on our home screen. Those were days long before you could own movies – legally anyway – at least, the kinds I wanted to see (dinosaurs, monsters, and superheroes). There were no home video players and companies like Castle Films didn’t yet include such genre material in their catalogs.

The only “occupation” I really yearned for back in those days was to be a rock star (honestly!) which seemed like a pipe dream and almost did become a reality in the late 1960s (Google Penny Arkade and Mike Nesmith). All I really knew back then was that I didn’t want to work in a “regular job”. Luckily, I was fairly adept at various creative activities – e.g. writing, art, music, acting and other things – which explains why there are so many seemingly unrelated credits on my resume.

As to my home movie ideas getting incorporated in my later comic book writing, it was really the other way around. I wanted to put some of the ideas I’d read and seen in comic books – and also in Universal and Hammer horror movies, Republic movie serials and so forth, up on my screen. It wasn’t until the 1990s, after writing novels, non-fiction books, music, TV shows and a lot of magazine articles, that I got to write and direct my first movie, which was Dinosaur Valley Girls. ” 

WALLY MONK

As you know, Paint Monk’s Library focuses on science fiction, horror, and fantasy, with a special emphasis on Conan the Barbarian and Robert E. Howard’s work. How much of your Dagar the Invincible was inspired by the work of Howard, or was this your own variation on the “barbarian” genre? Can you share how you envisioned Dagar as a different barbarian, or what separates him from the rest of the fictional warriors on comic stands at the time?

Dagar the Invincible by Gold Key Comics.

DON GLUT

“When I created Dagar, I’d never read a Conan story or anything by Howard, except maybe one or two of his horror short stories. My only experience with Conan was the Marvel comic book. That was the first time I’d ever heard of the character. The only Conan I knew was the middle name of the author of the Sherlock Holmes stories.

Yes, I definitely wanted Dagar to be different from Conan and all the Conan clones that followed in comics. Most importantly, Dagar was not a barbarian, a fact that gets stated more than once in my stories. He was a civilized guy, the last of his countrymen – an origin similar to that depicted subsequently in the movie Conan the Barbarian. Dagar had blonde hair, as opposed to the black hair sported by Conan and most of his comics imitators. And his horse had a name (Kasa), as did those of my old cowboy heroes like Roy Rogers and Hopalong Cassidy. Another way the Dagar book differed from the Conan (and Kull) comic books is that it used sound effects and gave the characters thought balloons.”

WALLY MONK

Tragg and the Sky Gods, one of my personal favorite comics, was a nice mixture of science fiction and prehistoric times. What was your inspiration for Tragg, and can you tell us how you envisioned the series shaking out? There is a link to Dagar the Invincible from this series – did you envision the two to one day be entwined in some major storyline?

Gold Key editors wanted ancient astronauts, which became Tragg’s ‘Sky Gods’.

DON GLUT

Tragg was directly inspired by Joe Kubert’s Tor, which had a tremendous impact and influence on me as both a kid reader and also as a later professional writer and amateur paleontologist. In fact, Tor was one of the primary influences on my lasting interest in things prehistoric, which would lead eventually to a serious study and the writing of semi-technical books.

I really wanted to do Tragg as a straight Tor-type caveman-dinosaur book. But Gold Key already had Turok, Son of Stone, and dinosaurs also appeared frequently in the company’s Tarzan books, which may be the reason my original concept got shot down. Erich von Daniken’s Chariots of the Gods and its follow-ups were hot topics back then and Gold Key wanted to capitalize on the phenomenon. So they asked me to come up with a series about the so-called ancient astronauts.

I saw that as an opportunity to get my Tragg title, at least in a compromised way. When they okayed my request to set the series in prehistoric times, they also let me bring in Tragg (who’d already appeared in two Mystery Comics Digest short stories) as its hero. When I started the Tragg book, I don’t recall his being related to Dagar and Dr. Spektor.

Tragg & The Sky Gods was inspired directly by Joe Kubert’s Tor.

I think that idea came later after all three books were going full steam. I’m really surprised the editors approved those relationships. They hated continuity, convinced as they were that nobody would ever read even two consecutive issues of a single series, nor were they fond of crossovers. Miraculously, I was able to carry that idea over all three titles – Tragg, Dagar and Spektor.”

WALLY MONK

Tragg gave you a great opportunity to mix dinosaurs with science fiction and primitive man. With the science fiction connection, did you have any plans to have Tragg literally in a pure “science fiction” setting, ala cross-over comics? And what do you think of some people claiming that Tragg inspired Marv Wolfman’s Skull the Slayer at Marvel Comics?

DON GLUT

“I never heard that Tragg inspired my good friend Marv’s Skull the Slayer. Given the poor distribution of the Gold Key books, especially on the East Coast, I wonder if Marv was even aware of my book. But comic books featuring prehistoric creatures were very popular during the 1970s, which also saw DC bringing back Tor for a while. I’d say that Marv, a very creative guy, was just following this trend and his own instincts. As to a pure SF setting, no, Tragg was always meant to live only in his regular prehistoric environment.”

WALLY MONK

Are there any comics in your favorite genres from the 1970s and 1980s that you would have enjoyed writing but did not have or take the opportunity, and what are they?

DON GLUT

“I really wanted to write a Frankenstein series. When Roy Thomas gave Marvel’s Monster of Frankenstein to Doug Moench – both of whom were and remain good and long-time friends – it was heart-breaking. I would have liked to do more What If, Captain America and The Invaders, books I really enjoyed writing. But that wasn’t in the cards. I think I could have had fun with Ka-Zar too.

Also, I once pitched an idea to Roy about doing a team-up book I called The Golden Girls, featuring some of Marvel’s Golden Age distaff heroes like Golden Girl, Venus, Namora and Blonde Phantom, but he wasn’t interested.”

The Golden Girls could have been a team filled with some of Marvel’s Golden Age heroines, but Roy Thomas didn’t seem interested in the project at the time.

WALLY MONK

For those of us who loved your three series with Gold Key, can you share with us a little tidbit of how you would have wrapped up Tragg and Dagar had the series run their course? We’ll call it a Paint Monk’s Library exclusive!

DON GLUT

I’d already written some future plot ideas for those books, plus a full Spektor origin script, which Gold Key bought and new editor Bill Spicer edited – shortly before the books got abruptly and surprisingly canceled. As much as I can recall, the Zorek character in Tragg would have gone completely insane, possibly turning against his own people, and Keera would have become an ally to Tragg and Lorn against the “Sky Gods”. I don’t remember any plans to bring Graylin back in Dagar. But I certainly had plans for Lakota to return to Dr.Spektor, after being a prisoner of the Dark Gods. I also planned to have Spektor head a team of former heroes including the Owl, Man of the Atom, Purple Zombie, Simbar and maybe others to combat the Dark Gods. When Dark Horse reprinted the Spektor books in hardcover, I wanted to do a graphic novel, reinstating the 1970s status quo, after which a new writer may want to take it over as a regular series.”

WALLY MONK

As one of many talented writers who had their time with the Savage Sword of Conan, what was your spin on the Cimmerian? What were your ideas for expanding the Conan mythos through your writing?

DON GLUT

“My only involvement with Conan was writing a plot for one of the Thomas-scripted annuals. As already stated, I wasn’t a fan of sword and sorcery per se so I never thought much about the character. Even if I had, Conan was strictly “Rascally” Roy’s baby back then.”

WALLY MONK

You wrote stories of Kull and Solomon Kane during your time writing for Marvel. Which Robert E. Howard character was your favorite, and why? Which do you feel gave you the most opportunity to “flesh out” or be creative?

DON GLUT

“I never enjoyed writing Solomon Kane, didn’t like the character. I wrote those stories because Roy gave me the gig, they were fairly easy to write and they paid well. I managed to do quite a lot of stories featuring the Puritan, many of which were adaptations of Howard’s prose originals, meaning I didn’t have to come up with original plots.

Robert E. Howard’s puritan Solomon Kane was never one of the author’s favorites.

Inventing a plot is, with me, more difficult than the actual writing. I did have fun with the Dracula and Frankenstein Castle crossover stories, because they involved other subjects that interested me.

As for Kull, I had to make that book different from Dagar, which I was writing at the same time. But in a sense, Kull was for me what I wanted to do with Dagar, but Gold Key company policy wouldn’t let me do. I even did a secret crossover between the two books, which I assume not many people (certainly not my editors at Gold Key) ever caught!”

WALLY MONK

If an independent company were to approach you about revisiting Tragg or Dagar, would you be open to the possibilities? I think there are many of us that would love to see these characters brought back for a new story. If not, have you ever considered crowdfunding a new effort, through perhaps Kickstarter or Indiegogo?

DON GLUT

“If you could clear the rights and the money was good, I would probably write at least a few new stories. But I’d rather write Tragg, which I enjoyed more than Dagar.

I would write Dr. Spektor in a heartbeat. When a few years ago I heard that Spektor was going to be brought back, I campaigned to write it, but to no avail. What I had in mind would have picked up today, starting with the Doc, now an old man, literally climbing out of the Dark Gods’ Hell, where he’d been kept prisoner (since his Gold Key book was canceled).

Dynamite’s re-envisioning of Doctor Spektor never quite caught on.

Spektor’s friends would have been kept un-aging in some kind of status field by the Dark Gods. The story would have been Spektor’s final battle with the Dark Gods, maybe with the aid of those previously mentioned heroes. After defeating the Dark Gods once and for all, he would be rewarded by the Warrior Gods by having his youth restored and his friends – including Lakota – freed and back to normal. So a new series would begin picking up from where we left off in the late 1970s – business as usual.

But the Powers-that-Be weren’t interested. I never read the rebooted version, which didn’t catch on.

As to Kickstarter and Indiegogo, I’ve already launched a number of crowdfunding campaigns for my movies and also a Tales of Frankenstein collectors calendar, all of which bombed. Despite heavy promotion by me, they brought in tons of likes, shares and smiley faces on Facebook, but very little money. I couldn’t even get people just to put in a dollar, which I figured anyone could afford. They all proved to be just colossal wastes of time for me.”

WALLY MONK

The comics industry has changed quite a bit. Modern comics tend to focus on storylines that can be adapted to graphic novel format and tales which could be told in a single issue often span five or more comics. What do you think of the contemporary comics industry, and is it making progress and moving forward, or is something missing?

DON GLUT

“I have no comment because I haven’t read comic books since about the mid-1990s. I have no idea what’s happening with any of the old characters ore what is brand new. And I fondly remember complete stories that could be told in five to seven pages. Remember those back-up features in Action, Adventure and World’s Finest? But I’m back to writing comics scripts again. I’m a regular writer for Rich Sala’s magazine The Creeps, writing basically the same kind of horror stories – only better – that I wrote decades ago for the Warren magazines (Creepy, Eerie and Vampirella), which were my first professional comics-script sales.

Don is a regular contributor in The Creeps, a horror anthology magazine that is the spiritual successor to Warren’s Creepy and Eerie.

So in a way, as far as writing comics is concerned, I’ve sort of come full circle. So far I’ve written close to 100 stories for The Creeps, most of which have been stockpiled for future issues, and have had a lot of enjoyment doing so. I also recently wrote graphic novel called Tales of Frankenstein, adapted from my recent motion picture of the same title. The book features great interior art by Mike Vosburg, Nik Powliko, Brian Postman, Craig Wilson, Russ Rainbolt and Jim Craig, and the cover is a painting by Christopher Shy; and the introduction was written by legendary Jim Steranko. I’m happy and quite proud of the way this is turning out. The graphic novel should be out (soon) from Bill Cunningham’s Pulp 2.0 Press.”

WALLY MONK

Growing up, who were your early influences in the comic industry, and who were your role models while developing your own writing style? What would you say to a young, teenage aspiring comic book writer or filmmaker? What advice would you give them to pursue their dream of being a pop-culture guru like yourself?

DON GLUT

“My earliest role models and influences as to writing comic book stories, in no particular order, were Stan Lee (Marvel), Al Feldstein (EC horror and crime), Joe Kubert (Tor) and Dick Briefer (Frankenstein). After getting firmly into the business as a professional, I continued to learn a lot about writing comics from Russ Manning, also Roy Thomas and my main Gold Key editor, Del Connell.

As to advice in regards pursuing any dream like writing or drawing, etc., think of it as a day job rather than a hobby; keep working at (and improving) your craft; let rejection roll off your back and don’t take it personally; network wherever and whenever the opportunity comes your way (it’s not so much what or who you know, as much as who knows you); and, perhaps most important of all, never give up!

Remember, if you have the talent, the drive and persistence, work like writing comic books can be your day job. It’s like playing and getting paid for it!”

WALLY MONK

Thank you to Mr. Glut for taking the time to answer these questions for our friends and fantasy aficionados.

DON GLUT

“And thank you, Wally. And please visit my websites www.donaldfglut.com and www.pecosborn.com.”

***

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EDITORIAL: Memories of Old Comic Collecting Days

Inside the convenience store, mom and dad go to pick up groceries while you go to find the greatest treasure of all – the spinner rack. ‘Hey Kids! Comics!’ it proclaims. What are your favorite memories of childhood comic book collecting? And do you still own that ‘first’ comic book you bought from the stand?”

By WALLY MONK – Paint Monk’s Library Editor

It was a late summer day in 1978 when I first discovered the joy of the comic book spinner rack. Little did I know that same rotating shelf of entertainment would be a primary source of fun for the rest of my youthful – and adult – life.

Mom was ordering meat from the deli; dad was around the corner buying charcoal to fire up the grill in preparation for a weekend cookout with our neighbors. I was looking at the magazine rack, and like most adolescent boys, trying to catch a glimpse of the Playboy magazine which was safely tucked back at the top of the shelf, away from the prying eyes (and short arms) of other neighborhood kids like me.

Then I spied the newly installed rotating comic display.

To this day, I remember the issues I saw there. Marvel’s Godzilla #14 grabbed my attention first, proclaiming the “Siege of the Super-Beasts”! On the shelf below, Devil Dinosaur #6 featured a flame-red Tyrannosaurus Rex and two fuzzy cavemen. A quick spin of the shelf revealed other treasures, like Conan the Barbarian #90 and Peter Parker, the Spectacular Spider-Man #22 (featuring Moon Knight!)

Godzilla #14 was the first comic I owned.

I carried a handful of these comics over to mom. To the best of my recollection, I had a dozen or so picked out. She told me that I could only have two – she pointed out that the two comics (still only 35 cents!) cost as much as a gallon of gas and they were expensive. Being a big dinosaur aficionado, Devil Dinosaur and Godzilla were the winners.

Sitting tucked in the branches of a tree in our front yard, I read both issues until they were threadbare, and if I still had them today, they’d probably rate a .5 or lower on the highly-vaunted CBCS and CGC grading scales. Later, I would begin adding Conan the Barbarian to my collection, although my parents thoroughly resisted all of my attempts to buy Red Sonja. At the time, I thought it was because they didn’t want me to buy so many comics – I’d later learn, of course, that they felt Frank Thorne’s compelling artwork was a little risque.

As Anwar Sadat and Menachem Begin approved the Camp David accords and the headlines touted the new and revolutionary “Space Invaders” video game, I was perfectly content in my little comic book world. Many of the other boys played baseball during the summer; I spent my days trading comics with fellow “nerds” and arguing over who was the best superhero.

To this day, we haven’t decided if Conan, Ka-Zar, Kull or Wulf the Barbarian was “the toughest”, but it’s a debate we gave up a long time ago.

Ah, the memories.

What are your earliest memories of comic book collecting? Please share your story by commenting below using your Facebook, Twitter or Gmail account!

REVIEW: Aesir Redeemed, Buryat Conquered & Betrayal

“Conan is finally ready to rally the Aesir to battle against the forces of King Aosoka and the Grandsons of Heaven. But once Buryat is liberated, are more sinister forces at work? Friends are not always friends and things are not always as they appear in the final part of this four-part story arc by Rascally Roy Thomas!”

(EDITOR’S NOTE: Welcome to The Classic Conan Countdown, a series of reviews focusing on the original 275 issues of Marvel Comics’ Conan the Barbarian, which were published from 1970 to 1993. This is a review of Conan the Barbarian Vol. 1, #112.)

By WALLY MONK – Paint Monk’s Library Editor

This issue marks the end of Roy Thomas’ adaptation of the Norvell W. Page novel “Sons of the Bear God” – and I’m glad it’s over.

The late 1960s, 70s and 80s saw a resurgence of much of the early pulp material and piles of pastiches and re-adapted stories saw print. While this was certainly a treasure trove of tales to choose from, not all of them were good. This story by Page is a perfect example of one such bad story.

Thankfully, and I say this selfishly, fellow librarians Bob Freeman and Andy Maglothin got the worst comics in this four-issue arc to review (although in all honesty, that was not by design!) Mine was the conclusion, and in my opinion, the easiest to read of them all. Perhaps it was merely that I knew the arc was over and I felt the need to be gentler with my thoughts.

Review: Conan the Barbarian (Vol. 1) #112

It is time to rally the imprisoned Aesir, and Conan heads back to talk to Niord and convince him to join his warband in their overthrow of King Aosoka and the Dwarves of Buryat, a.k.a the Grandsons of Heaven.

But Niord is not interested and afraid, believing that the Grandsons of Heaven (whom Conan scorns and calls merely the “Dwarves of Buryat”) cannot be overcome because of their magic. Conan insults him and the honor of the Aesir – naturally, a scuffle ensues.

The Aesir are kept full of mead and other drink by the dwarves, and Conan suspects this is what is dulling their senses and the will to fight against their oppressors. The barbarian also believes their drinks are being laced with Black Lotus, a Stygian flower well known for its hypnotic powers.

Having found a cure for the lotus-created stupor, Conan gives the antidote to the Aesir. Marching up a hillside, they manage to kill some bears (or find some bearskins) and begin their march on the city. The Aesir, heading towards Buryat, cause a panic – the Heaven Bear is angry with their grandsons the dwarves, the citizens believe – and the city and King Aosoka are soon overcome.

“Arrhr! I’m A BEAR!” – Niord of the Aesir

What about Thanamund and his “sister” Tossa? There’s more to the pair then meets the eye, as Conan will find out as he tries to enter the liberated City of Buryat!

CAPSULE REVIEW: Funny looking magical bear ears, viewing glasses, and dwarves overcoming the Aesir is far too much for this classic Conan reader. These are not Tolkien dwarves or Warhammer dwarves – they look more to me like fat hobbits with beards. King Aosoka looks like an overweight little girl. I cannot imagine the many conundrums Roy Thomas dealt with while adapting this mess to accommodate Conan’s Hyborian world.

While John Buscema’s artwork is still strong, it’s difficult to draw realistic and compelling fake bear ears. It’s true. The whole idea is just silly. Did I mention the bear ears? I think I did. For some reason, they really stuck out (pun intended) in this tale. In fact, after reading this story, I felt the strong urge to run around in a bearskin shouting “RRRAR!” at anyone who crossed my path. Well, not really, but I did laugh out loud.

I certainly understand Roy Thomas’ desire to make Conan as real as possible by using references from both Robert E. Howard and other Howard inspired authors. But Norvell W. Page’s novel was just a poor choice that resulted in a poor comic, despite a talented cast of creators.

On a scale of 1-10, I’d rate this isue a 5. Buy this only if you insist on having a “complete” Conan collection.

EDITORIAL: Moon Knight Chronology Launches Jan. 6

By WALLY MONK – Paint Monk’s Library Editor

As many of you know, Paint Monk’s Library launched in early 2017 on eBlogger as my personal blog. Receiving only a few hits a week, I’d talk about my collecting habits, dollar bin comic hunting and painting an occasional RPG miniature (badly).

Since that time (really since the launch of our Classic Conan Countdown), the Library has grown to include current comic reviews, editorials, weekly features, interviews and a loyal compadre of associate librarians. The site has grown from a dozen hits a day to nearly 5-7K hits a week with nearly 1,000 new visitors. We’ve moved from eBlogger to a nicer format on WordPress, with our own URL. Paint Monk’s Library isn’t quite a “huge” site yet, but we’re growing each day, and I’m truly blessed.

This year – next week, in fact – Paint Monk’s Library will be embarking on another HUGE project, this one even bigger than our Classic Conan Countdown (in scope, anyway!) Made possible ONLY by the work of the fine folks at the Into the Knight! Podcast, we plan to review the entire comic book chronology of Marvel’s Fist of Khonshu, the Moon Knight.

Every Monday, Paint Monk’s Library will feature a new Moon Knight review, beginning with Marc Spector’s first appearance in Werewolf By Night #32 on January 6. We’ll also feature a link to that week’s installment of the Into the Knight! Podcast at the end of each review.

While there is no intention of abandoning our constant coverage of Conan the Barbarian and other sword-and-sorcery related titles, I’ve been wanting to expand to slightly more obscure superheroes that are my personal favorites, and the guys at Into the Knight! have made this possible. Perhaps this will lead one day into exploring other characters I love personally, like Marvel’s Cloak & Dagger or Hillman’s Airboy and Air Fighters comics. Only time – and our growing readership – can make that determination.

https://intotheknightpodcast.wordpress.com/

So if you love the Fist of Khonshu as much as this monk does, be sure to check back on Jan 6th as we kick off the Moon Knight Chronology. And in the meantime, check out the Into the Knight! Podcast…you’ve got a lot of great Moon-talk to catch up on in the meantime.

Thanks for all of your support – and see you on Mondays!

As always, I am – Wally (AKA Paint Monk)

EDITORIAL: Paint Monk’s Library 2019 in Review

By WALLY MONK – Paint Monk’s Library Editor

“Should auld acquaintance be forgot,
And never brought to mind?
Should auld acquaintance be forgot,
And auld lang syne.”

Robert Burns, 1788

A happy and blessed New Year to all of our readers! As we make the plunge into a brand new year in a mere five hours (as I write this, it’s 7 p.m. EST), I’d like to take a moment to look at all the neat things Paint Monk’s Library has done this year and give a shout out to the people who made 2019 possible for this site.

Sadly, we’ve also lost some familiar faces along the way. Dean Plakas, one of our regular feature writers and a contributor to our Classic Conan Countdown, put the temporary brakes on library blogging as did Troy Chrisman and associate editor Joeseph Simon. To the three of you, your contributions were excellent and I’m grateful you came aboard. You are all missed, and are welcome to be guest writers at any time you want to put fingers to keyboard again.

Here are some of the highlights of 2019 at the Library:

The Classic Conan Countdown Resumed!

On Nov. 1st, 2018, I was in a precarious position time-wise and decided to conclude the Classic Conan Countdown. I even posted a “good-bye” message, which was met with a slew of personal emails asking that the Countdown continue, and in fact, run to completion.

There was no walking away for the Paint Monk, as readers sent emails encouraging me to continue the Classic Conan Countdown, which resumed in January 2019.

Thanks largely to Librarians Andy Maglothin and Bob Freeman, the Countdown resumed and continues today! You’ll see the latest installment – Conan the Barbarian #111 – tomorrow afternoon.

Interviews Aplenty in 2019

It’s amazing what can happen when your blog begins to attract readers. Paint Monk’s Library scribes had some great opportunities this year for industry interviews, talking with tremendous talents like Tim Truman, Rik Offenberger, Don Glut, Jim Zub and Scott Oden.

A nice talk with Jim Zub was just one of many Paint Monk’s Library interviews in 2019.

Even more interviews are being planned for 2020. If you missed any of these great articles, you can find a link to all of our interviews here.

A New Website – Goodbye eBlogger

To kick off 2019, Paint Monk’s Library ported over to WordPress from the eBlogger platform that was used since the Library opened its doors. A new and improved blog was hosted at www.paintmonkslibrary.com and it was a monumental project – don’t believe anyone when they say “porting over from one platform to another is easy!”

The conversion from eBlogger to WordPress is complete, but updating the remaining 100+ articles imported from eBlogger is ongoing.

I am still editing and re-formatting old articles from the previous blog, and this involves cutting, pasting, new images and in some cases re-writing entire articles in the new interface. This process will continue throughout 2020, and my hope is to have EVERYTHING updated to our new WordPress format by year’s end.

Library Followers & Page Likes Increase

I’m proud to say that in over two years of blogging, I’ve spent a whopping $30 on ads promoting the Paint Monk’s Library. This means that the bulk of our growth is organic and not manufactured.

2019 began with a mere 422 followers on our Facebook page, and as of today, we’re 8 individuals away from 700. While not monumental (yet!), it’s refreshing 1) to know that we’re gaining new readers and 2) that our growth is a result of genuine interest and not the result of click bait advertising.

We entered 2019 with an average of 100-250 clicks on new articles daily, and that has grown to 5-7K clicks each week from unique users and repeat visitors (yes, I do account for spam bots, otherwise the numbers would be even higher!)

Thanks To – All of You!

Paint Monk’s Library wouldn’t exist without you – our readers. I’m so grateful for each page click, comment, like or share each of you choose to give us. My hope is to keep you coming back in 2020 with even more exciting content (big news tomorrow!), more interviews, and more surprises that are in store.

Last but never least, a HUGE thank you to my right-hand Librarians, Bob Freeman and Andy Maglothin. This blog wouldn’t be here without your dedication, your writing skills, and the time you donate each week to share your thoughts with PM Library readers. Faithful readers and followers, please take the time to show Bob and Andy you appreciate their work too with an occasional comment on their reviews and interviews.

Please join me in giving our regular scribes a hearty New Year’s HUZZAH!

You’ve got no idea how much a kind word and some feedback can mean to a writer, especially one who is writing as a labor of love and for the benefit of fellow comic fans.

Now, let’s sing that verse of Auld Lang Syne and ring in the new year!

As always, I am – Wally (AKA Paint Monk)

Holiday Greetings from the Paint Monk

May the warmth of family and good friends fill you with good cheer as we begin the Christmas season. And hearty wishes for your favorite comics under the tree, of course!

Blessings to you as we approach the new year, and as always, thank you for your support of this monk’s humble library.

As always, I am – Wally (AKA Paint Monk)

REVIEW: Good Art & Bad Writing In SSoC Finale

“A DEMON IN ARGOS! After witnessing a heinous crime, CONAN hunts down a mysterious demonic sect. But whatever his intentions, Conan may well doom the nation if he doesn’t solve the mystery in time! An epic quest across the Kothian Hills and a surprise twist! Plus: The final chapter of Scott Oden’s “THE SHADOW OF VENGEANCE”!

By WALLY MONK – Paint Monk’s Library Editor

It was with much trepidation that I opened the latest – and final – issue of Savage Sword of Conan. Topping Roy Thomas’ and his predecessor, Jim Zub’s takes on the Cimmerian would be a tough thing to accomplish. And given Marvel’s track record on Conan since January, if it’s not Jim Zub or Thomas at work, I am leery.

Sadly, writer Frank Tieri keeps the presentation problems ongoing with a great plot and some of the worst dialogue I have ever read in a Conan comic book. What’s even sadder is that a book that began on tenuous ground at the onset ends with a whimper and another missed opportunity to tell a good Hyborian tale.

I am not certain whether or not whether this was Frank Tieri’s writing or a script mashed up by editorial. Either way, the end result is an issue that leaves you wondering how a good idea can be so problematically assembled.

But there’s some good to be had – the final chapter of Scott Oden’s compelling novella “The Shadow of Vengeance” is a treat and Andrea De Vito’s pencils, coupled with the inks and colors of Scott Hanna and Java Tartaglia, are first-rate.

REVIEW: Savage Sword of Conan (Vol. 2) #12

Conan travels the land, in pursuit of…someone or something…in the Kothian hills. Then the story flashes back to the City of Argos, days earlier.

Conan has just ended a tavern brawl and is angry that he spilled his drink. He asks the barkeep if he will be reimbursed, but the barkeep says he’s more worried about the tavern the Cimmerian just trashed than reimbursing the barbarian for a mere ale spill.

After a terse exchange in which Conan gives the barkeep a mere coin for his troubles, Conan spies a child with a harness around its neck. We learn the little girl’s name is Tama, and she is supposedly on the run from her “family”.

Soon Tama’s “family” arrives and they capture the child, with seemingly nefarious intention. Conan is in hot pursuit, facing off with the would-be familial kidnappers. He dispenses most of them, leaving one alive to reveal a surprising truth. Is there more to this “child” than our Cimmerian knows?

CAPSULE REVIEW: In the first pages of this issue, we see a Conan who is so rude that he flips a bartender a coin for trashing his establishment and then takes it back when the innkeeper says it’s not enough. A few panels later, he’s worried about a peasant girl who can’t afford food. These are odd choices here from Conan – he’s always had a strange morality, but the transition in this story is poor from one interaction to the other.

The art by Andrea De Vito is overall very good, and the colors are bright when necessary and subdued in other panels. The backgrounds, when not minimized, are enticing. Conan’s face is good on some pages, yet distorted on others. Ultimately, the artwork is enjoyable and I’d like to see more from De Vito.

Its the dialogue here that’s disconcerting. Conan is like a warrior-poet in this issue. “Serves me right for dispelling you earlier with but a glancing blow,” he tells one cultist as he engages his enemy. In another panel, he snarls at a menacing demon, “What’s happening is this is actually going exactly as I thought it would. Mayhap I’m actually nothing more than a distraction.”

The demon at one point tells Conan, “And since I have use for you no longer, you’ll excuse me as I now proceed to devour your face.

Good grief. Who writes this garbage? I sure hope it’s not Frank Tieri. My wishful thinking is that it’s an editor who totally missed the boat. What’s saddest is that the plot is actually good. It’s the dialogue that is a mess.

On a scale of 1-10, I’d rate this issue a 6. If the script contained good dialogue, it’d garner a 7.5 or an 8 based on the interesting plot and good artwork.

So long Savage Sword, we hardly knew ye.