I had previously read the January or February 193[7] WT with a Rimel story in it, and had been utterly unimpressed.— F. T. Laney, Ah, Sweet Idiocy! 2
Weird Tales, Jan. 1937 |
F. T. Laney occupies an odd place in Howard
scholarship. He missed the period when Howard was actively writing and didn’t
come to pulp and fantasy fandom until about 1939. He rose to prominence in the
early-to-mid 1940s as a member of the Los Angeles Science Fiction Society, the
Fantasy Amateur Press Association (FAPA), and as editor and publisher of The Acolyte fanzine (1942-1946), which was devoted primarily to H. P. Lovecraft. Yet
being where he was when he was, and a vocal part of fandom, Laney ended up
being at the confluence of a good deal of Howardian interest and ended up
playing a silent but important role in Robert E. Howard’s legacy.
In the course of being an editor of a
Lovecraft-oriented fanzine and searching out material, Laney came into contact
with a number of Lovecraft’s correspondents, including Clark Ashton Smith,
Duane W. Rimel, F. Lee Baldwin, Emil Petaja, Fritz Leiber, H. C. Koenig, Nils
H. Frome, R. H. Barlow, August Derleth, Donald and Howard Wandrei, F. J.
Ackerman, E. Hoffmann Price, and Stuart M. Boland; many of whom were also
correspondents with Robert E. Howard, and it was largely through these contacts
that Laney became in contact with things Howardian.
Laney got in touch with F. Lee Baldwin through
their mutual friend Duane W. Rimel, and beginning in December 1942 Baldwin
began working on material for The Acolyte,
both in terms of a regular column (“Within the Circle,” a continuation of
Baldwin’s column from The Fantasy Fan in
the ‘30s), and writing to former pulpsters and their correspondents for
material. (Laney 13) As part of this mailing campaign, in early 1943 Baldwin
contacted Robert E. Howard’s friend F. Thurston Torbett, looking for
information on Howard for a potential article, which can be read in F. Thurston Torbett and F. Lee Baldwin on Robert E.
Howard. The correspondence stretched into 1944, and Baldwin’s
article on Howard never appeared, nor did he mention the Texan in any of his
other articles in The Acolyte.
CAS, Laney, & Bob Hoffman, circa 1940s |
E. Hoffmann Price had returned to his native
California in 1934, stopping along the way to visit Robert E. Howard in Cross
Plains, Texas, and settling near San Francisco. He became a friend and
correspondent with Barlow; who even visited Price accompanied by an aged James
F. Morton in 1939. (BOD 53, 355-357)
It is not clear when exactly Laney got in touch with the native Californian but
a letter from Price to Laney, dated 22 July 1944, on the subject of Robert E.
Howard, was published in The Acolyte #9 (Winter 1945). This may have been
inspired by Price’s essay “Robert E. Howard” in the fanzine Diablerie #4 (May 1944), as Laney was a friend of the publisher Bill Watson
(Laney 31), or maybe it came from the same place as F. Lee Baldwin’s questions
to F. Thurston Torbett.
Whatever the case, Price began contributing
letters to The Acolyte, beginning
with The Acolyte #7, then the letter
concerning Howard in #9, and letter in #10 (Spring 1945) announcing the death
of Dr. Isaac M. Howard:
This letter from E.
Hoffman Price missed the last Acolyte by one day:
Dr. I M. Howard ((father
of Robert E. Howard)) died in Ranger, Texas, Sunday night, November 12, 1944.
Dr. P. M. Kuykendall, West Texas Hospital, Ranger, Texas wired me. While I
could have wired a floral tribute for the funeral, November 15, I sent Dr. K. a
box of Cuban made cigars, saying that as between flowers in a cemetary [sic] and
weeds on his desk, I preferred the latter. In that Dr. Howard's surviving
kinfolk had ignored him during the closing years of his life, I should not,
even had I their addresses, care to offer condolences; that instead I preferred
that my final expressions of respect and esteem for the late Dr. Howard be
tendered to Dr. Kuykendall, colleague, and perhaps friend as well, of the
departed.
So I
wrote a paragraph: "He faced bereavement and loneliness and old age
without complain; stoically, never voicing anything querulous or bitter or self
pitying; so that it would have been bellittling to have felt sorry for him.
Darkness and death; he knew both were near, and he faced them alone, adn with a
steadfastness that we survivors could well accept as a pattern, in our own
eventual time.
"I
had been worrying lest his sight fail before the memorial edition of his son's
collected stories went to press; included in the foreword was a personality
sketch, condensed draft of which Dr. Howard read some months ago. And now I
hear that darkness and death came together."
Shortly after Dr. Howard’s death, Price would
receive a considerable amount of Robert E. Howard material—the Kuykendalls,
heirs to the Howard estate, sent Price a considerable number of Howard’s
unpublished manuscripts and letters; R. H. Barlow, who had gone to Mexico by
this time, also sent Price a microfilm containing a number of Howard’s poems.
The timeline of events becomes somewhat confused at this point, but several
things happen:
●
Price became associated with a fan
named Stuart M. Boland, a resident of San Francisco, who has previously been a
correspondent of H. P. Lovecraft
●
Boland wrote “An Interlude with
Lovecraft,” describing his correspondence with Lovecraft and Robert E. Howard,
which was published in The Acolyte #11
(Summer 1945)
●
Price lent Boland some of the
Howard materials
●
Boland subsequently loaned these
materials to Laney:
E.H.P.
wrote to me about some letters which had been written by Bob Howard to him some
time before the latter’s demise. I was under the impression that I had returned
all the material E.H. had given me when he requested the return of H. P.
Lovecraft’s epistles to him for Arkham House—Previously I had sent all
duplicate material to a fellow named (Don?) Laney in Los Angeles at E. H.’s
request. Laney was the publisher of a top-notch S.F. fan mgz. However, I shall
check diligently for any stray material and send it on to you if located.
—Stuart M. Boland to Glenn Lord, 5 May 1958
—Stuart M. Boland to Glenn Lord, 5 May 1958
All I can give you is a
‘Remembrance of Robert Howard’ based on what I recall of his correspondence.
Laney had all the original papers and missives.
—Stuart M. Boland to Glenn Lord, 1 Feb 1959
—Stuart M. Boland to Glenn Lord, 1 Feb 1959
(quoted
from Roehm 25 Feb 2014)
Whether Boland wrote the article before or
after Price lent him the Howard materials is unclear. The details of the
transactions are traced by Rob Roehm in "The Legend of the Trunk" and in the
article A Lost Correspondence: Robert E. Howard and Stuart M.
Boland. In The Acolyte #12
(Fall 1945), Price responded to Boland’s article with an enthusiastic letter on
Lovecraft and Howard, and Laney himself added that:
We have a series
contemplated by Boland that promises to develop into our most interesting
feature.
1946 |
If Laney had planned publication of something
on or by Robert E. Howard, there would be almost no one else in 1945 with
access to the depth and breadth of material to do so. Despite this, the final two
issues of The Acolyte (Winter and
Spring 1946) feature no such article series. We do know at least one item which
Laney had planned but never got around to publishing:
Among the things we have
in view are: the long-delayed montage of WT authors, accompanied by brief (200
word) biographies; a history of the magazine, written largely from the point of
view of literary criticism; a catalog of issues (not an index) for the benefit
of collectors; an article dealing with WT's various pulp rivals (Ghost Stories,
Strange, and the ret); and perhaps a short article on the better WT Artists.
We would
appreciate it tremendously if you could find time to jot down a list of the WT
authors from 1923 to date whom you consider are worthy of being mentioned. Many
of course are obvious: HPL, CAS, yourself, Howard, etc.
—Francis T. Laney to
August Derleth, 27 Jun 1944
We get hints of Laney’s appreciation for
Robert E. Howard, but there’s a real question about how much of his fiction
that Laney actually read. He hit fandom at that weird moment in which he might
have caught the last dregs of Howard’s original fiction, such as the novel Almuric which was serialized May-Jun-Aug
1939 in Weird Tales, or reprints like
“Worms of the Earth” (WT Oct 1939);
but after that the early 40s were a dry spell as far as Howard’s weird fiction
seeing print or reprint, with book publication several years away, when “The
Black Stone” was published in Sleep No
More (1944). Yet Laney had the good fortune of having friends Duanw W.
Rimel and F. Lee Baldwin. In late 1943, to augment his article “The Cthulhu
Mythos: A Glossary” for Arkham House, Laney:
[...]
induced Baldwin to loan his file of WEIRD TALES (I already was storing Rimel’s
for him) and asked Derleth if he could help me out on certain of the stories
whic[h] were still unavailable to me. His help was prompt and generous, not
only did he send me detailed notes on several tales which I did not have at
hand, but he also sent me the carbons of the totally unpublished “Dream Quest
of Unknown Kadath”. I set to work, and read exhaustively everything by HPL and
Clark Ashton Smith, making copious notes from scratch. Not content with this, I
skimmed every issue of WT in the house (1925 to date) and read carefully
anything that seemed to have a bearing on the research. (Laney 17)
Laney’s article “The Cthulhu Mythology” in The Acolyte #2 (Winter 1942) is most
notable for containing no mention of Robert E. Howard whatsoever, attributing
the “Serpent-men” and “Valusia” to Clark Ashton Smith, and Unaussprechlichen Kulten of von Junzt to Lovecraft. The revised essay, “The Cthulhu Mythos: A Glossary”
which appeared in Beyond the Wall of
Sleep (1943) includes Howard among the creators of the Mythos, correctly
attributes the Serpent Men, Valusia, and Unaussprechlichen
Kulten to the Texan, and giving as a list of his Mythos stories:
Howard, Robert E.: Dig Me No Grave, The Black Stone, The Devil
in Iron, The Footsteps Within, The Thing on the Roof, The Valley of the Worm (423)
Which misses quite a bit, but gives an
indication of what of Howard’s fiction Laney had read. Other things were afoot
in Howard publishing, however. Wartime paper shortages had impacted the
publishing schedule of Arkham House, but founders Donald Wandrei and August
Derleth were still looking for writers and material to publish. In 1944, Laney
wrote to Derleth
You
are correct in your evaluation of REH as a great ‘story-teller’ rather than a
great writer. His stuff is still great entertainment material, though; and I
believe that the great gobs of raw, almost crude, color which he splashed
around so copiously will make his collection one of Arkham’s most popular
volumes. —Francis T. Laney to August Derleth, 3 Aug 1944
Laney wasn’t the only voice asking for a
Howard volume, and in The Acolyte #7
(Summer 1944), Derleth wrote:
Out Of Space And Time, by
Smith, is now out of print, as I wrote that it soon would be. . .A Hodgson and
a Howard collection will be coming along soon, probably in 1945; and my novel,
The Trail of Cthulhu, in 1946.
Derleth placed an advertisement for Skull-Face and Others in The Acolyte #10 (Spring 1945), although
it ultimately wouldn’t be released until 1946. Laney was very much a promoter
of the Arkham House publications, both in The
Acolyte and in the LASFS organ Shangri-L’Affaires
which he occasionally edited, and even wrote to Derleth on 31 July 1945 about
Crawford’s The Garden of Fear and Other
Stories, worried that Crawford might be violating copyrights by reprinting
stories from Howard and Lovecraft in that chapbook.
There was some tangential references to Howard
in The Acolyte. Henry Hasse’s story
“Horror at Vecra” is a Cthulhu Mythos tale that references the Nemedian Chronicles, perhaps the first
writer to so reference Howard’s Conan tales in a Mythos milieu, in issue #5. In
issue #6, RAH Hoffmann’s “Arcana of Arkham-Auburn,” recounting a visit to Clark
Ashton Smith, says “We discussed many things and people” including “R. E.
Howard"; in the same issue Robert Bloch offers some corrections to Laney’s
article “The Cthulhu Mythology” including references to Howard (although Bloch
was mostly incorrect):
Bran Remote realm mentioned by
Howard and used by HPL in Whisperer in Darkness.
The
Black Stone Figures
importantly, of course, in Machen and Howard. HPL used references to its
cryptic talismanic significance in Whisperer in Darkness.
Bloch’s errors probably came from
unfamiliarity with Howard’s work, as given in Bloch vs. Conan; still, it’s curious neither
he nor Laney ever mentioned “Worms of the Earth.” Howard Wakefield in his
article on “Little Known Fantaisistes” in The
Acolyte #10 added “‘Floki's Blade’ resembles somewhat the heroic tales of
the late Robert E. Howard.” Wakefield’s comments may have spurred Laney’s
thoughts when he was writing "Criteria for
Criticism: The Preliminary to a Survey" which appeared in The Acolyte #11, where he wrote:
A mood of hero worship,
often blended subtly with weird horror, may be found in many stories of Robert
E. Howard's Conan series is probably the outstanding example of this type;
others in the genre include E. Hoffman Price's Bayonne stories and the Grey
Mouser series of Fritz Leiber, Jr.
Francis T. Laney’s interest in The Acolyte, and fandom in general,
waned after the end of World War II. By 1947 Laney had largely retired from
fandom over many internal disputes and personality clashes, “gafiating” from
fandom with the publication of a book-length “tell all” memoir Ah, Sweet Idiocy! (1948) through FAPA.
Laney died of bone cancer in 1958...and there the tale is almost ended.
Several people have
written me wanting Lovecraft material, apparently for themselves, but F.T.L.
must have returned or disposed of any he had at least three years before he
died; probably earlier. Then too, [Charles] Burbee could have gotten it from
him, as he did so much elese [sic].
—Edith Campbell Laney
to August Derleth, 21 Aug 1960
F. T. Laney had a considerable amount of
Lovecraftiana, and thanks to Stuart M. Boland, R. H. Barlow, and others
probably not an inconsiderable amount of Howardiana as well; it is not clear
what became of his photograph of Robert E. Howard, for example. Glenn Lord sent
letters to Edith Laney asking after the material, but responded in the
negative:
As soon as I can find a
bit of time I’ll get into Francis’ files and see if the tear sheets of Howard’s
material and the Lovecraft correspondence is there.
—Edith Campbell Laney
to Glenn Lord, 6 Feb 1959
I have, at last, gone
through all Mr. Laney’s effects. I did not find either the tear sheets or the
Howard-Lovecraft correspondence. I am sorry. Neither did I find reference or
correspondence which would have indicated where they might be. Will keep your
letter and if anything should turn up will let you know.
—Edith Campbell Laney
to Glenn Lord, 25 Apr 1959
(quoted from Roehm 25 Feb 2014)
In 1965, Lord was made the agent for the
Howard Estate, and began looking for Laney’s material again. The trail led back
to Boland, who claimed:
A typist who was copying
them for Brother Laney mentioned their existence quite some time ago. She
wishes to remain anonymous but she may be prevailed upon to reveal (or at least
disclose) the info. Since she was not paid for the typing she is not too happy
about science fiction people in general. She is not a fan & her interests
lie outside this field.
—Stuart M. Boland to
Glenn Lord, 16 Aug 1965
(quoted from Roehm 1 Apr 2014)
(quoted from Roehm 1 Apr 2014)
It isn’t clear who this “typist” was—or why
Laney would even need a typist to copy the materials. Lord was suspicious, but
sent a check—and received a substantial amount of the lost Howard materials. It
is also not clear whether Boland had received the materials back from Laney
some point before his death, or if his widow had returned them sometime
afterwards. Whatever the case, the caretaking of these materials was one of the
small services Laney had unknowingly accomplished for Lovecraft fans and
scholars.
Abbreviations
BOD Book of the Dead Friends of Yesteryear:
Fictioneers & Others
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