Greetings, Groove-ophiles! During the Groovy Age, due mainly to the success of Marvel's Conan the Barbarian comic, the spinner racks became filled with sword and sorcery characters. Some (like Dagar and the Warlord) were created especially for comics, while others (like Kull and Beowulf) were adapted from other sources. Marvel, DC, and even Gold Key threw their headbands into the blood and guts arena, but most of their efforts were short-lived. Case in point: Marvel's adaptation of Lin Carter's Thongor.
Thongor was a unique twist on Robert E. Howard's Conan as it combined Howard-style characters with and Edgar Rice Burroughs inspired world. Carter's character first appeared in the mid-60s during the ERB boom and appeared in a series of novels, as well as starring in several short-stories that popped up in a variety of fantasy anthologies. The coolest part of the history of Thongor? He could have been Marvel's premiere barbarian. S'truth! The story goes that writer Roy Thomas planned to get the rights to Thongor before he tried for the Conan license because he figured the Conan folks would want too much money. Thomas learned that he could get Conan for the same price as Thongor (though he offered more money out of embarrassment), so it was Conan, not Thongor, who became the star of Marvel's first and best-loved sword and sorcery mag.
So, Marvel was having success with Conan, added Kull, and tried to add more S&S properties to their line-up. Creatures on the Loose seemed to be the "barbarian try-out mag" since Kull made his debut there with ish 10 (December 1970), followed by Gullivar Jones of Mars (December 1971), and finally Thongor with ish 22 (December 1972). (Hey--barbarians for Christmas three years in a row!) Thongor's strip lasted through CotL #29 (February 1974) with sci-fi writer George Alec Effinger writing the first four issues (with Tony Isabella helping out on ish 25), then Golden Age great Gardner Fox wrote issues 26-27 before the unique voice of Steve Gerber took over the wordsmithing with issues 28-29. The hugely talented then-newcomer Val Mayerick handled the art from issues 22-27, with Vincente Alcazar taking over for the last two issues.
It was a cool series, really. Unlike many of Marvel's experimental titles of the period, it had a pretty stable creative team--only 3 writers and two artists for an eight issue run, all of them turning out some pretty inspired work (with the exception of the colorist who gave Thongor black instead of red hair for the first few issues). I think Gerber was heading into some pretty trippy places, and I would've loved to have seen where he was going. Sadly, we'll never know.
What we do have are some great memories--and some far-out scans!--of the Warrior of Lost Lemuria, including his debut tale which Ol' Groove is gonna lay 'pon ya right now! Who loves ya, baby?
I ran into several issues when I first discovered Comical™ a few years back, and tracked down an old paperback as well. Thanks for the backstory. It was an interesting read.
ReplyDeleteI knew Lin Carter -- met him through our mutual friend, Chris Steinbrunner. Lin was a great guy -- funny, slightly naughty, with a fertile imagination and an open-hearted manner. I miss him!
ReplyDeleteThongor was a really cool book that mixed the R.E. Howard and E.R. Burroughs types of stories really well. As for Thongor's hair color- in the original book "Thongor Of Lemuria", Lin Carter describes Thongor as having black hair. I think they changed it to Red in the comics series to differentiate Thongor from Conan. Why they didn't do that from the get-go is anybody's guess. I think a lot of decisions made in the early '70's, particularly from Marvel, were made on the fly. I don't think there were a lot of Editor/writer/artist "summits" like you have today. Anyway, Thongor was a cool character, and that Steranko cover for his first appearance was fantastic!
ReplyDeleteNeat post. Just looking at the thumbnails of the scans, it looks swell. Love the allure of the skin in the 2nd to last page. The pacing is nice and then the big reveal on the final page. It's cool
ReplyDeleteIssue 23 is still my favorite! Man-Monster!
ReplyDeleteYou may be right about the hair-color, Steven. For some reason I had it in my head that Thongor always had red hair, but what you say makes a lot of sense.
ReplyDeleteAnd thank goodness they DIDN'T have those creativity-killing "editorial summits" back then--thank goodness they had little editing at all!
This was great stuff, Groove! I'd heard a lot (okay, a little) about Thongor before, but had never actually seen him in action. Got any more Thongors lurking in the Vault of Groovedom?
ReplyDeleteBob, awesome that you knew Lin Carter, I've just discovered his books in the last 10 years or so, fantastic author.
ReplyDeleteIt would be great if someone would issue these Thongor stories as a tpb.
Interestingly as a side issue, in around 2003, filmaker Mark L. Lester (commando, class of '84) was discussing plans for a Thongor movie.
Gun stuff! Love your commentary and it would be a kick to see more issues, especially the one's written by Gerber.
ReplyDeleteSteve Gerber said he hated these and didn't really contribute anything to them, that it was really just a straightforward adaptation of what Lin Carter wrote.
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