Off the Shelf: Swords from the East by Harold Lamb

Swords from the East cover image Read from the Foreword to Swords from the East by Harold Lamb, edited by Howard Andrew Jones:

"Harold Lamb wrote that he’d found something “gorgeous and new” when he discovered chronicles of Asian history in the libraries of Columbia University. He remained fascinated with the East thereafter, which is evident from his first stories of western adventurers in Asia to the last book published before his death in 1962, Babur the Tiger. All of his popular fiction is anchored in Asia, whether it be the cycle of Khlit the Cossack, descended from the Tatar hero Kaidu, or Durandal’s Sir Hugh of Taranto, who travels into Asia during the conquests of Genghis Khan, or even the adventures of Genghis Khan himself, as related in “The Three Palladins” in this volume.

Lamb tried his hand at contemporary fiction and was published in a number of top-flight magazines; these stories, though, do not hold up very well today. The characters, even when adventuring in Lamb’s favorite stomping grounds, come across as wooden and dated.* In this age, both the 1920s and the 1120s are remote to us. It might seem odd that a story set in one time can sound old-fashioned and quaint while one set in the other does not, especially when they were crafted by the same writer, but looking over the whole of Lamb’s work, one reaches an inescapable conclusion: it is when Lamb looked backward that his prose sprang to life. His historical characters are far better realized than his modern heroes. Passion for his subject was writ large in every historical story. Lamb loved what he was writing, and it shows, most especially in the tales crafted for Adventure magazine, where editor Arthur Sullivan Hoffman gave him free rein to write what he wished. Even today, some eighty or ninety years after their creation, no matter changed literary trends and conventions, these stories beguile with the siren song of adventure. Lamb’s polished and surprisingly modern sense of plotting and pacing is in full evidence in every story in this volume.

*The best of Lamb’s contemporary fiction is probably his short novel Marching
Sands, which has been reprinted several times."

Harold Lamb (1892–1962), who wrote biographies and screenplays as well as historical fiction, is best remembered for his tales of Cossacks and crusaders. Howard Andrew Jones is the managing editor of Black Gate magazine and the editor of Lamb’s Swords from the Desert and Swords from the West, both available in Bison Books editions.

To read a longer excerpt or to purchase Swords from the East visit http://www.nebraskapress.unl.edu/product/Swords-from-the-East,674193.aspx.

 

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