Conan the Fearless

Conan the Fearless
Cover of first edition
Author Steve Perry
Cover artist Kirk Reinert
Country United States
Language English
Series Conan the Barbarian
Genre Sword and sorcery
Publisher Tor Books
Publication date
1986
Media type Print (Paperback)
Pages 275
ISBN 0-8125-4248-7

Conan the Fearless is a fantasy novel by American writer Steve Perry, featuring Robert E. Howard's sword and sorcery hero Conan the Barbarian. It was first published in trade paperback by Tor Books in February 1986; a regular paperback edition followed from the same publisher in January 1987, and was reprinted at least once. The first British edition was published in paperback by Sphere Books in January 1988.[1]

The book also includes "Conan the Indestructible", L. Sprague de Camp's chronological essay on Conan's career.[2]

Plot

Conan gets stuck in the Corinthian city of Mornstadinos where he enlists as a bodyguard defending a magician and Eldia, a girl who can command fire elementals, against the evil mage Sovartus. Sovartus has been collecting such elemental whisperers and already has the other three; he wants Eldia to complete the set. This brings Conan into conflict with a host of other threats as well, including a demon employed by Sovartus and the witch Djuvula, who happens to be the demon's half-sister, the rich senator Lemparius, who happens to be a were-panther, the avaricious criminal Loganaro, and various and sundry monsters. Plots and counter-plots build up to a climax at Sovartus's stronghold.

Reception

Ryan Harvey rates Conan the Fearless above Conan the Free Lance, one of Perry's later Conan novels, in a review of that book. Harvey assesses the author's Conan corpus in general as "goofy," noting that he "has a reputation among Conan fandom for overkill and general silliness."[3]

"This one is pretty good," opines critic Don D'Ammassa[4]

Notes

References

Preceded by
Conan the Valorous
Tor Conan series
(publication order)
Succeeded by
Conan the Renegade
Preceded by
"The Hall of the Dead"
Complete Conan Saga
(William Galen Gray chronology)
Succeeded by
"The God in the Bowl"
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