Conan of Cimmeria
0 sources
Conan of Cimmeria
Summary
Conan of Cimmeria is a literary work[1]. It ranks in the top 4% of literary_work entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (32 views/month).[2]
Key Facts
- Conan of Cimmeria authored Robert E. Howard[3].
- Conan of Cimmeria authored L. Sprague de Camp[4].
- Conan of Cimmeria authored Lin Carter[5].
- Conan of Cimmeria's instance of is recorded as literary work[6].
- Conan of Cimmeria's publisher is recorded as Lancer Books[7].
- Conan of Cimmeria's genre is recorded as sword and sorcery[8].
- Conan of Cimmeria's follows is recorded as Conan the Wanderer[9].
- Conan of Cimmeria's followed by is recorded as Conan the Buccaneer[10].
- Conan of Cimmeria's part of the series is recorded as Lancer/Ace Conan Series[11].
- Conan of Cimmeria's place of publication is recorded as New York City[12].
- Conan of Cimmeria's part of is recorded as Conan the Barbarian books[13].
- Conan of Cimmeria's language of work or name is recorded as English[14].
- Conan of Cimmeria's distribution format is recorded as printed book[15].
- Conan of Cimmeria's country of origin is recorded as United States[16].
- Conan of Cimmeria's has part is recorded as The Curse of the Monolith[17].
- Conan of Cimmeria's has part is recorded as The Blood-Stained God[18].
- Conan of Cimmeria's has part is recorded as The Frost-Giant's Daughter[19].
- Conan of Cimmeria's has part is recorded as The Lair of the Ice Worm[20].
- Conan of Cimmeria's has part is recorded as Queen of the Black Coast[21].
- Conan of Cimmeria's has part is recorded as The Vale of Lost Women[22].
- Conan of Cimmeria's has part is recorded as The Castle of Terror[23].
- Conan of Cimmeria's has part is recorded as The Snout in the Dark[24].
- Conan of Cimmeria's publication date is recorded as +1969-00-00T00:00:00Z[25].
- Conan of Cimmeria's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/0gs0n1[26].
- Conan of Cimmeria's Open Library ID is recorded as OL20905935W[27].
Body
Works and Contributions
Authored works include Robert E. Howard[3], a writer[28], 1906–1936[29], of United States[30], specialised in fantasy[31]; L. Sprague de Camp[4], a writer[32], 1907–2000[33], of United States[34], awarded the Damon Knight Memorial Grand Master Award[35]; and Lin Carter[5], a writer[36], 1930–1988[37], of United States[38].
Why It Matters
Conan of Cimmeria ranks in the top 4% of literary_work entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (32 views/month).[2]