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Others say...
"El ultimo rey de una raza que desaparece" "Bran Mak Morn" recoge todos los cuentos de este rey picto, que ve como su raza va desapareciendo en las brumas del tiempo.Un gran héroe trágico.Howard se luce en cada historia de este tomo, siendo mi favorita, el "crossover" que realiza con otro grande de Howard:Kull de valusia en el corto "Reyes de la noche". En todo este libro se puede sentir la épica violenta que caracterizaba a Howard, y aunque los seguidores del escritor de pulps estaran mas que satisfechos con esta edicion "definitiva" de Bran, probablemente sean los neófitos - ¡oh, afortunados!- que disfrutarán mas de aquel torbellino de imagenes y emociones fuertes del inmortal REH.Imprescindible.
"R. E. Howard's most personal hero" In bringing to us the tale of the doomed Pict Bran Mak Morn, Robert Howard, perhaps unknowingly, reveals much about himself as he details the vain struggle of the First Race to overcome the tide of Roman power in Britain. Fighting against a fate he can never bring himself to yield to, Bran Mak Morn summons demons and asks the aid of long-dead kings even as he must battle bloodthirsty wizards in his own tribe as he seeks to reestablish the great days of Pictdom. Tragically for Bran, his failure is utter, and like his creator, he falls to his destiny. Had Howard written more about the king of the Picts, the saga would stand better among the Texan barbarian's work. As it is, though, the incomplete chronicles of this doomed hero haunt and intrigue readers to this day. His equally doomed creator would almost certainly have been pleased.
"Enjoyable, but Perhaps not Enough Completed Material to Justify a Single Volume" The Roman Empire has stretched in Britain. One race of people fights Caesar at every turn, the Picts, led by their king, Bran Mak Morn. But the Picts, rulers of a vast empire themselves in the days of Atlantis, have long since degenerated into brutish barbarism. Bran knows that his battle against Rome and his own people's extinction is a lost cause, and fights on, nonetheless.
I was unfamiliar with Bran Mak Morn before Wandering Star and Del Rey began reprinting Robert E. Howard's work. Since I had enjoyed the Conan and Solomon Kane volumes, I added "Bran Mak Morn: The Last King" to my library eagerly. However, after reading the volume, I must admit that this isn't my favorite example of Howard's work. I was surprised, as most scholars consider Bran Howard's most personal character. Bran arose from Howard's interest in his own Scots-Irish ancestry. Bran also represents Howard's own ideas about the nature of humanity, the ever-present barbarian struggling against the hypocrisy of civilization. Unlike many of his other stories, however, Howard's Bran stories place substantial emphasis on mood more so than on action.
Bran's people, the Picts, are a common fixture in Howard's writings. They appeared frequently to plague Conan years after Howard had left Bran behind. Howard's version of these people is a romanticized one, with an elaborate, mythical history of their spectacular empire built in the long-forgotten past. But he also presents them as a disintegrating people, who long ago forgot most of the basic skills necessary to maintain and build a civilization. Howard is also able to examine some of his own racialist points of view, as Bran is an exception, maintaining the majestic Aryan qualities that had marked the Picts in the ancient days.
Howard only completed six stories about Bran. Howard experimented with techniques with Bran more than he did with his other characters. The first story "Men of the Shadows" is a first person narrative of a Roman soldier and his capture by the Picts, and his meeting with Bran, who is simply referred to as a chief. The most important aspect of this story is that it sets the stage for who and what the Picts are. It was not published until after Howard's death.
The second story, "Kings of the Night" is one of the two truly stand-out stories in this collection and certainly one of Howard's best stories generally. Bran is attempting to build an alliance with various tribes against an impending Roman assault. One tribe refuses to fight unless led by a king. A wizard summons forth Howard's own King Kull from the past. This story is interesting as it explicitly connects Howard's various series of fiction. Bran is the descendent of Kull's ally Brule the Spear-Slayer and Kull himself plays an important role. The action of the battle is gleeful and ferocious, and the atmosphere is chilly and foreboding.
In "Worms of the Earth", which is certainly one of Howard's most intense and creepy tale, and the other real stand-out story. The only story told from Bran's point-of-view sees the monarch make an unholy bargain with another race the Picts forced underground generations past. The bargain: vengeance against the Roman procurator. The imagery of sub-human creatures skittering around in the dark waiting to drag unsuspecting souls to their deaths is delicious in its horror.
The last two stories are interesting in that Bran isn't physically in either story. In "The Dark Man", Turlogh Dubh, an outcast Celt, pursues a young princess of his clan and her Viking captors. On his journey, he discovers a large wooden statue, and carries it with him on his pursuit. The statue is an image of Bran Mak Morn, long dead, but still thirsting for battle. "The Dark Man" is an entertaining yarn, as the statue plays a pivotal and magical role in Turlogh's quest. I also found it fascinating that Howard had allowed one of his characters to have definitive end.
The other story "The Lost Race" finds another Celt, Cororuc, in a battle for his life when he is captured by the last remnants of the Picts, long driven underground. It's an interesting story providing a coda to the Bran saga, but at the same time going back over the Picts history and their tragedy without providing anything new or insightful. Bran has long been dead, and no trace of him appears, only his magical descendent.
"Bran Mak Morn: The Last King" is probably my least favorite collection of Howard's work thus far. While I liked the character, there is so little complete Bran material that I never felt connected to the character. The bonus materials are fascinating, but at the same time, they feel like padding. A small part of me wondered if perhaps, instead of the various unfinished drafts and the like, the Bran stories might have been better served in a more general collection of Howard's work. That having been said, Howard's storytelling skills are in top form in these stories, and anyone who has enjoyed Conan does owe it to themselves to read Bran Mak Morn.
"Perhaps Howard's Deepest Character" Of all of Howard's many memorable characters (Kull, Conan, etc.) I would say that Bran Mak Morn is the most interesting.
As leader of the dwindling and nearly extinct race of Picts (a real culture that Howard has embellished upon), he battles Roman incursions and struggles to raise his beloved race out of the pit of savagery and darkness into which they are swiftly falling. He has a knowledge that no matter what he does, the fall of his race is inevitable. The true strength of Bran's character is that he battles and struggles toward his goal anyway, even though he knows that he will eventually fail.
'Men of the Shadows' is the first story in this collection and presents a strong start. It is a great introduction to Bran's character and the goals toward which he is striving.
'Kings of the Night' is the second story, and features a looming battle between the Roman Legions and the confederated armies of the northern races. This story also features an appearance from one of Howard's other popular characters. This comes very close to being my favorite in the collection.
'Worms of the Earth' is a strong tale featuring Bran's quest for vengeance against a Roman General's unjust treatment of a Pict. This is my favorite tale in the collection, and shows Howard at his best. Strong imagery, beautiful prose, and a dark plot.
'The Dark Man' takes place many centuries after Bran's death, but is nevertheless a powerful tale of the Pictish people who worship the dead king as a God.
'The Lost Race' is one of the weaker tale but presents a history of the Pictish people that makes it worthy of this collection.
The Miscellanea and Appendices present helpful information but the only complete stories that feature Bran Mak Morn are those mentioned above. There are also many of Howard's poems about the Pictish people and Bran Mak Morn that show a different side of Robert E. Howard's skills and add much to the character of Bran and his people.
The entire book is covered with Gary Gianni's beautifully atmospheric drawings and I would reccomend this collection for anyone seeking to discover Bran Mak Morn's character and Howard's expansive talents.
"Put Some BRAN In Your Diet!" Good old Robert E. Howard! In the last dozen years of his sadly truncated life, he created a whole universe of pulpy goodness. If you've read all the Conans, and all the Kulls, and the Solomon Kanes, you still have these jewels of fast-paced blood-drenched bosom-heaving skull-cleaving story-telling to look forward to. These are among my favorites in Howard-world: he's hip-deep in the kind of lost-race mythology that he loves, and the stories here of Bran Mak Morn and Black Turlough O'Brien really sing. Nobody did it better. When REH uses a cliche, he makes it HIS cliche, and you instantly forgive him for it. He took such JOY in creating these fantasies of wish-fulfillment that you're swept heedlessly along.
Thank Crom I discovered these stories when I was 11-- when I read them now, I'm that age again, and the wonder and innocence of that time is revisited.
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Bran Mak Morn: The Last King
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What our customer's say!
"ROBERT E. HOWARD STILL THE BEST OF THE BEST!!!", There are so many good things about this book! The introduction is superb! Here's a small sample by Rusty Burke, 'Robert E. Howard (1906-1936), in a writing career that spanned less than a dozen years, created many memorable fantasy adventure characters, such as Conan, Kull, and Solomon kane, who continue to thrill readers long after they first appeared in the legendary magazine, Weird Tales. The seemingly endlessly inventive author also created enormously popular characters in other genres, such as the wester tall tales of Breckenridge Elkins, the rollicking misadventrues of Sailor Costigan, and the Middle Easdtern exploits of El Borak and Kirby O'Donnell. But of all the many characters he created, none seem to have held for the Texas author a fascination to equal that of the people he called Picts, and their great king, Bran Mak Morn. Contents are: Foreward, Introduction, Men of the Shadows, King of the Night, A Song of the Race, Worms of the Earth, The Dark Man, The Last Race, Poem, Miscellane, The Little People, The Little People-Typescript, The Children of the Night, Bran Mak Morn, Bran Mak Morn manuscript, Synopsis, Worms of the Earth - Draft Version, Fragment, Poem - Previously Unpublished, Untitled, Appendices, REH and the Picts, A chronology, REH Bran Mak Morn and the Picts, Note on the original Howard Texts. Sketches byl Gary Gianni. Gary does a superb job on these sketches which are about every other page and coincides with the stories! How can I wear the harness of toil, And sweat at the daily round, While in my soul forever The drums of Pictdom sound? by REH on page 187 Miscellanea. Enjoy!
Also recommended: Whole Wide World by Novalyne Price who dated REH during the last few years of his life. This is a must have and also see the DVD The Whole Wide World starring Renee Zellweger and Vincent D'Onofrio as REH. Blood & Thunder, The Life & Art of REH by Mark Finn, The Last of The Trunk and The Never Ending Story by Paul Herman, Selected Letters of REH by Rob Roehm, Dark Horse comics, Roy Thomas Conan and Conan The Phenom, Two-Gun Bob, The Dark Barbarian and The Barbaric Triumph by Don Herron, Savage Sword of Conan, The Beast from the Abyss a story about Cats and my all time favorite.
"Kull in disguise", A significant portion of this book was just a repeat of the story in Kull. I feel I was ripped off by the ads for this book.Again, a disjointed portrayal of a great writer by the authors
"Super Reader", Another in the Del Rey Robert E. Howard collection, and like the Kull volume chock full of assorted material to go along with the stories. Here you find more than one poem, some articles, drafts, and even a copy of some of the actual typed pages of one story. Fragments of stories, fragments of plays. Even the geeky editorial correction notes.
There is a lot of Pict to be found here. One of the most interesting things is at the end, where Howard's writing and thinking about the Pict race is traced via correspondence with H. P. Lovecraft and others, and analysed by the article writers. A very worthy inclusion, indeed.
Also a reasonable number of illustrations to be found in this volume.
Bran Mak Morn the Last King : Foreword by Gary Gianni Bran Mak Morn the Last King : Introduction by Rusty Burke Bran Mak Morn the Last King : Men of the Shadows [Bran Mak Morn] Bran Mak Morn the Last King : Kings of the Night [Bran Mak Morn; Kull] Bran Mak Morn the Last King : A Song of the Race [Bran Mak Morn] Bran Mak Morn the Last King : Worms of the Earth [Bran Mak Morn] Bran Mak Morn the Last King : The Dark Man [Turlogh OBrien] Bran Mak Morn the Last King : The Lost Race Bran Mak Morn the Last King : Poem [The Drums of Pictdom] Bran Mak Morn the Last King : Notes on Miscellanea by Rusty Burke Bran Mak Morn the Last King : The Little People Bran Mak Morn the Last King : The Little PeopleTypescript Bran Mak Morn the Last King : The Children of the Night Bran Mak Morn the Last King : Bran Mak Morn [Bran Mak Morn] Bran Mak Morn the Last King : Bran Mak MornManuscript Bran Mak Morn the Last King : Synopsis [Bran Mak Morn Synopsis] Bran Mak Morn the Last King : Worms of the EarthDraft Bran Mak Morn the Last King : Fragment Bran Mak Morn the Last King : Poem Bran Mak Morn the Last King : Untitled Howard Story Bran Mak Morn the Last King : Robert E. Howard and the Picts: A Chronology Bran Mak Morn the Last King : Robert E. Howard, Bran Mak Morn and the Picts · Rusty Burke and Patrice Louinet
4.5 out of 5
"Beyond Sword and Socery, This is Literature!", Beauty and savagery, sorrow and violence, such is the song of Bran Mak Morn. These are violent fantasy tales, but written with such literary flare you cannot put them down. Robert E. Howard captures the emotion of rage like no one else. As an exploration of rage and the things it can drive men to do, this is a superlative work. As compelling adventure stories, nothing is better.
"Less bran than expected", I hadn't read any of these stories before, though I like Conan and Kane. Overall, I was a bit disappointed. The books seemed to have a lot of fillter, and the stories were only loosely connected. Some were definitely atmospheric, so it wasn't that the individual stories were disappointing. Just that I expected stories about a central character and got stories about a central idea -- the race of the Picts in a Howard's mythology.
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Read this reviews before You buy...
"ENJOYED EVERY WORD OF THIS ONE", If you are a Robert E. Howard fan, which I am, then your going to certainly like this one. Fast moving, as all of Howard's stories are, this is NOT just a Conan wrapped in a different skin. I do have to agree with a couple of other reviewers in that this is perhaps not Howard's best work, but it is certainly typical Howard and certainly worth the read. As has been pointed out, this is not a bunch of unpublished tales, cleaned up by other authors, this is the real stuff, warts and all. If you enjoy this particular genre, then you will no doubt enjoy this one. I collect these particular books and am glad to have a copy of this one, old and ragged as it might be.
"Excellent!! Dark fantasy...", I'm a big fan of the Conan books by Robert E Howard and heard many times of his Bran Mak Morn stuff, especialy 'Worms of the Earth', which is supposedly one of his best short stories. After reading the stories contained in this collection, I can honestly say they're definitely some of the best short fantasy fiction I've read.
Bran Mak Morn stuff tends to be darker than Conan and set in a (slightly) more contemporary history, with Romans and such. As a result, I'd say that people who love Conan books are perhaps not garaunteed to enjoy these, but should definitely give them a go!!
The book itself, like the Conan books by this publisher, is fantastic. Very well editied and illustrated and despite the fact that the actual finished stories make up probably under half the book, the supplimentary material is what sets this collection above similar priced books. Smart presentation, good value for money and excellent fiction!! :)
"Good stuff, but not Howard at his best.", I've been a REH fan for some time now, and these are definitely enjoyable stories, but certainly not his best. Still, they are certainly worth the read, and the artwork, presentation and such are very nice. Also, it's nice to read pure Howard, rather than all of the edited versions that exist these days.
"King of a dying empire", Bran Mak Morn is Robert E Howard's most introspective, cunning, and tragic character. He leads the Pict nation, a fading race of stone-age warriors eternally battling the encroachments of civilization. These stories leave the reader with a haunting notion of mortality, of a world where civilization is corrupt, and all things noble lie dying. Read this and experience pure power, action, and that satisfying sense of legend.
"bran mak morn. the last king", the book was brillant. the illustrations fantastic. the delivery was speedy. the whole experience was excellent.
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