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Heroes and Hobgoblins

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Heroes and Hobgoblins
Dust-jacket illustration by Tim Kirk for Heroes and Hobgoblins
AuthorL. Sprague de Camp
IllustratorTim Kirk
Cover artistTim Kirk
LanguageEnglish
GenreScience fiction, fantasy
PublisherDonald M. Grant, Publisher, Inc.
Publication date
1981
Publication placeUnited States
Media typePrint (Hardback)
Pages158
ISBN0-937986-33-X
OCLC8631602
811/.52 21
LC ClassPS3507.E2344 H4 1981

Heroes and Hobgoblins is a 1981 collection of science fiction and fantasy poetry by American author L. Sprague de Camp, illustrated by Tim Kirk. First announced to be published in 1977 by Heritage Press, this edition never appeared, and the book was first published by Donald M. Grant, Publisher, Inc.[1] in an edition of 1250 copies signed by both the author and the illustrator.

The book contains most of the poems from de Camp's earlier collections, Demons and Dinosaurs and Phantoms and Fancies, though the arrangement is different in the current collection, along with a substantial number of additional poems.

"A Caution", "Atavism", "Babylon", "Conan the Limmerian", "Fiction", "Flying Fish", "Gratuity", "Happiness", "Houses on Stalks", "Ivan Vasilevitch", "Magus Imperitus", "Merlin", "My Carrack", "My Uglies", "Progress", "Psyche", "Ripples", "Shadows over Sqaumous", "Souls", "Spells", "Spring", "Tars Tarkas and I", "The Ameba", "The Barbarian", "The Bats of Florence", "The Dome of the Rock", "The Dragon-Slayers", "The Enchanted Isles", "The Fossils", "The Galápagos Marine Iguana", "The Ghost of H.P.L.", "The Little Green Men", "The Megaliths of Avebury", "The Octopus", "The Opossum", "Wayfarers", and "Yuggoth Comes to Providence" are unique to this collection.

"The Ogre" is shared with Demons and Dinosaurs only.

"A Glass of Goblanti", "A Night Club in Cairo", "Art", "Bear on a Bicycle", "Bourzi", "Carnac", "Disillusion", "Ghost Ships", "Jewels", "Leaves", "Mother and Son", "Preferences", "Tehuantepec", "Teotihuacán", "The Elephant", "The Hippopotamus", "The Home of the Gods", "The Indian Rhinoceros", "The Iron Pillar of Delhi", "The Lizards of Tula", "The Mantis", "The Newt", "The Old-Fashioned Lover", "The Olmec", "The Other Baghdad", "The Reaper", "The Saviors", "The Trap", "Thoth-Amon's Complaint", "Tiger in the Rain", and "Xeroxing the Necomonicon" are shared with Phantoms and Fancies only.

The remaining poems are common to all three collections.

Contents

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Notes

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  1. ^ Laughlin, Charlotte; Daniel J. H. Levack (1983). De Camp: An L. Sprague de Camp Bibliography. San Francisco: Underwood/Miller. pp. 64–65.