Karl Edward Wagner (12 December 1945 – 14 October 1994) was an American writer, poet, editor, and publisher of horror, science fiction, and heroic fantasy, who was born in Knoxville, Tennessee and originally trained as a psychiatrist. He wrote numerous dark fantasy and horror stories. As an editor, he created a three-volume set of Robert E. Howard's Conan the Barbarian fiction restored to its original form as written, and edited the long-running and genre-defining The Year's Best Horror Stories series for DAW Books. His Carcosa publishing company issued four volumes of the best stories by some of the major authors of the so-called Golden Age pulp magazines. He is possibly best known for his creation of a series of stories featuring the character Kane, the Mystic Swordsman. Although he held a degree in psychiatry, he became disillusioned with the medical profession, a disenchantment evident in the stories "The Fourth Seal" and "Into Whose Hands". He described his personal philosophy as nihilistic, anarchistic and absurdist, and claimed, not entirely seriously, to be related to "an opera composer named "Richard". Wagner also admired the cinema of Sam Peckinpah, stating "I worship the film The Wild Bunch".
Karl Edward Wagner
Author details
- Born:
- Dec. 12, 1945
- Died:
- Oct. 14, 1994
External links
Karl Edward Wagner (12 December 1945 – 14 October 1994) was an American writer, poet, editor, and publisher of horror, science fiction, and heroic fantasy, who was born in Knoxville, Tennessee and originally trained as a psychiatrist. He wrote numerous dark fantasy and horror stories. As an editor, he created a three-volume set of Robert E. Howard's Conan the Barbarian fiction restored to its original form as written, and edited the long-running and genre-defining The Year's Best Horror Stories series for DAW Books. His Carcosa publishing company issued four volumes of the best stories by some of the major authors of the so-called Golden Age pulp magazines. He is possibly best known for his creation of a series of stories featuring the character Kane, the Mystic Swordsman. Although he held a degree in psychiatry, he became disillusioned with the medical profession, a disenchantment evident in the stories "The Fourth Seal" and "Into Whose Hands". He described his personal philosophy as nihilistic, anarchistic and absurdist, and claimed, not entirely seriously, to be related to "an opera composer named "Richard". Wagner also admired the cinema of Sam Peckinpah, stating "I worship the film The Wild Bunch".
![Stephen King, Nathaniel Hawthorne, Ray Bradbury, Gene Wolfe, Philip K. Dick, Joseph Sheridan Le Fanu, Edith Wharton, Joanna Russ, William Faulkner, Joyce Carol Oates, Flannery O'Connor, Shirley Jackson, Edith Nesbit, Charles Dickens, Harlan Ellison, Henry James, Clive Barker, Charlotte Perkins Gilman, Richard Matheson, Algernon Blackwood, Edgar Allan Poe, Michael Shea, Ambrose Bierce, Tanith Lee, Ramsey Campbell, Fritz Leiber, David G. Hartwell, Robert Bloch, D. H. Lawrence, John Collier, M. R. James, Lucy Clifford, Russell Kirk, Karl Edward Wagner, Robert Aickman, Charles L. Grant, Manly Wade Wellman, 시어도어 스터전, Robert Hichens, Dennis Etchison, Walter De la Mare, Ivan Turguenev, Robert W. Chambers, Oliver Onions, Fitz-James O'Brien, H. P. Lovecraft, Disch, Thomas M.: The Dark descent (1987, T. Doherty Associates, [Distributed by St. Martin's Press])](https://bookwyrm-social.sfo3.digitaloceanspaces.com/images/covers/af70cd21-47b9-4601-89d5-9965e4271282.jpeg)












