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Blood and Thunder: An Evening With Mark Finn
Author Mark Finn talks about Robert E. Howard and makes his case for Howard's place in Texas' rich literary history and tradition.
When and where
Date and time
Thursday, May 11 · 6:30 - 8pm CDT
Location
Hall of State - Fair Park Hall of State and Other Locations 3939 Grand Avenue Dallas, TX 75210
About this event
- 1 hour 30 minutes
- Mobile eTicket
Robert E. Howard, creator of Conan, King Kull, and others that defined heroic fantasy, lived and died in the small town of Cross Plains, Texas. While his books remain in print, Howard himself has fallen into obscurity, his life mired in speculation and half-truth. Mark Finn traces the roots of his writings , correcting long-standing misconceptions, and offers a tour of Howard's world as he saw it: through his own incomparable imagination. The presence of the Texas Hill Country surrounding Cross Plains are apparent in Conan the Barbarian's world of Hyboria.
Author and biographer Mark Finn talks about Robert E. Howard, his life and times, and makes his case for Howard being included in Texas' rich literary history and tradition.
Mark Finn is an author, actor, essayist, pop culture critic, and movie reviewer. He is a nationally recognized authority on Robert E. Howard and has written extensively about the Texas author. His biography, Blood and Thunder: The Life and Art of Robert E. Howard, was nominated for a World Fantasy award in 2007 and is currently available in an updated and expanded second edition. His fiction, articles, essays, reviews, short stories, and comics have been published by Marvel Comics, Dark Horse Comics, DC/Vertigo Comics, The University of Texas Press, Greenwood Press, Tachyon Press, and others. He lives in North Texas, over an old movie theater, along with his high school sweetheart, far too many books, and an affable pit bull named Sonya.
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About the organizer
The Dallas Historical Society is a Cultural Resource and a Museum that collects, preserves, exhibits the and gives context to the rich history of Dallas and of Texas, and gives heart and shape to that community's future to educate and inspire present and future generations.