Today we're going to hop in the wayback machine, journeying to June 8, 2012. On that date I 
published a post on the Bronze Age Babies that placed some artwork we'd used about six months earlier in our review of Roy Thomas's and Barry Smith's "Tower of the Elephant" adaptation side-by-side with the John Buscema/Alfredo Alcala rendering in 
Savage Sword of Conan. We had some nice comments then, and I'm hoping for more of the same. And if nothing else, I've added a splash of color to the blog today!
Many thanks to my co-author and partner, Karen, for her blessing in my use of this material that is half her own. I appreciate her continued support in this endeavor that is the BWBC. And interestingly, you'll see us remark a time or two on the computer coloring in the Dark Horse 
Chronicles of Conan trade we each used in our original review. Ironic, isn't it, on this blog that celebrates comics in black and white? On to the review(s) -
Doug: 
 How many stories can you name that were written by one author, but 
illustrated by two masters, six years apart?  Today we're going to look 
at such a tale, "The Tower of the Elephant" featuring Conan the 
Barbarian.  Karen and I ran a review of the comic on the left, above, 
back in December 2011.  I have the reprints of The Savage Sword of Conan that Dark Horse has been publishing, and the last story in volume 2 reprints "Tower" from Savage Sword
 #24 (November 1977).  The latter version has very pretty pictures from 
John Buscema and Alfredo Alcala.  Given that the original version was 
put together by Barry Smith and John's little brother Sal, it's going to
 be difficult to go wrong here. 
Doug: 
 We're going to reprint our review, but relocate the Smith pictures and 
set them side-by-side with the Buscema versions -- as close as we can 
get it to the same scene that we used the first time around.  
Oft-commenter 
Cerebus660 said, back in December (with some minor editing by me):  
 
Roy Thomas was a master at adapting REH's work and getting the tone just
 right (within the boundaries of the Comics Code, of course).  Barry 
Smith's artwork was rapidly maturing issue by issue, and this story's 
final image of the tower collapsing is just beautiful.  Thomas had
 another go at this story when he wrote an extended version for Savage 
Sword Of Conan no. 24, with artwork by that team supreme, John Buscema 
and Alfredo Alcala. It's very interesting to contrast the two different 
approaches... 
Doug: If you're new around here, feel free to comment on the story itself or 
on our review; if you recall us doing this last year, then critiques of 
the different artistic interpretations are your mission.  So, away we go
 -- 
......................................................................................................................................................................
 
Conan the Barbarian #4 (April 1971) -- originally reviewed on December 26 2011
"The Tower of the Elephant!"
Roy Thomas-Barry Smith/Sal Buscema
The Savage Sword of Conan #24 (November 1977)
"The Tower of the Elephant"
Roy Thomas-John Buscema/Alfredo Alcala
Doug:  Happy Holidays, everyone!  And what cries out "Good will toward men" like a barbarian slugfest?
Doug:
  I can't hardly contain my excitement over the art in this issue.  Last
 Wednesday Karen and I (and a few of our faithful commenters) remarked 
that through the first several issues of Conan one could watch the 
maturation of Barry Smith's art.  This being only Smith's fourth outing,
 it's nonetheless a tour de force.  From the first page, his backgrounds
 are busy, the facial- and figure work are dynamic, and almost all hint 
of the Kirby-cloning is gone.  We also touched on the computerized 
recoloring last Wednesday... it's my opinion that it really adds to this
 moody tale.


 
Karen: Although
 Sal Buscema is credited as the inker on this issue I thought it really 
looked quite different from issue 3, which he also inked. I don't know 
if he was experimenting with brush work or what, but the lines here seem
 heavier and thicker, particularly in the first few pages. Whatever the 
case, the art was very strong in this issue. I agree about the coloring 
-I think they've done a very good job here, one that doesn't distract 
the reader.
 
Doug:  We begin in the filthy thief-city of Arenjun in Zamora; think of the cantina in 
Star Wars
 and you'll get the idea.  A fat rogue of a thief-kingpin speaks loudly 
about his prowess as a slave-trader and stealer of women; in
 the course of the conversation he mentions the  Elephant Tower of Yara 
and the jewels hidden within. A strong hand lights on his bulbous 
shoulder -- it belongs to the young Cimmerian Conan.  He notes that he 
has had his eye on the tower since coming to Arenjun, and that it  seems
 unguarded. The rogue laughs at the youngster's ignorance, and it's 
obvious that others in the tavern know of the Tower -- splinter 
conversations abound.  Conan wonders  if someone could bypass the ground
 guards, if he had the courage. That does it -- the probing questions 
aside,  this final insult sets the  Kothian rogue to near-frothing at 
the mouth.  The rogue strikes Conan across the chest, which draws the 
ire of the Cimmerian, as well as of his broadsword. A brawl ensues, as 
the candles lighting the den of thieves are knocked over.  When they are
 again lighted, the thief lies dead on the floor and Conan has left the 
premises.


 
Karen: This is a 
great sequence, one that really pulls you in to Conan's world. You can 
practically smell the perfume, smoke, and sweat in this thieves' den. 
Smith's art is also becoming much more detailed -note the pattern on 
Conan's sword. 
Doug:
  Conan has approached the silver tower, which rises from a large  
high-walled garden. As Conan stealthily approaches the perimeter, he 
sees a purple-robed figure approach the guarded gate.  Initially denied 
entrance, the robed figure rebukes the guard and is granted entrance.  
Conan notes that as the figure moves, his feet hover slightly above the 
earth!  Racing around the wall, Conan scales it and drops to the other 
side.  Getting his bearings, he begins to move when he suddenly trips 
over  the body of a guard. Had the robed figure strangled the man to 
death? Conan looks around, and feels  another presence moving slowly 
through the garden. Spying his company, and after sizing each other up 
for a moment, these two trespassers introduce themselves. The newcomer 
tells Conan that he is Taurus of  Nemedia, known as the King of Thieves,
 and also the true killer of the guard. Coincidentally, Conan and Taurus
 have arrived in the same space and time with the same goal.  I thought 
it was interesting here that neither Conan nor Taurus seemed suspicious 
of the other, and they quickly formed an alliance to steal the fabled 
Heart of the Elephant.


 
Karen:
 Thomas does a good job getting across Conan's youth and inexperience. 
He is both awed and frightened by the priest Yara. I can't imagine the 
Conan of later years reacting that way. The alliance with Taurus does 
seem a bit convenient though.
Doug:
  The now-allies move toward and onto the  inner wall. Bent on their 
common goal, Conan continues his inquiries into the history of their 
prize.  Asking Taurus just why this location is called the Tower of the 
Elephant, Taurus asks Conan if he knows what an elephant is.  Conan 
tells that while he's not seen one, he does know that they are 
"monstrous beasts, with a tail at both ends."  It's here that we see how
 Robert E. Howard often plugged in existing world history and mythology 
and the terminology of both.  Conan mentions that a wandering 
Shemite
 had told him this.  The term of course references one of the sons of 
Noah, Shem, who (if we are to believe classical anthropology) served to 
repopulate the earth in the area we'd call the Middle East.  Anyway...  
As our protagonists land on the other side of the wall, they immediately
 see that this new area is guarded by a group of three silent lions, who
 rush  towards the two thieves. Taurus takes out a blowpipe and  pushes a
 green dust into the air around the beasts.  Conan is incredulous as the
 animals breathe their last, and asks what manner of substance they were
 felled with.  Taurus answers that it is the powder of the mysterious 
black lotus.
Karen: I 
enjoyed Conan's remark about his god, Crom: "Great Crom lives on a 
mountain...and little he cares for what men do with their tiny lives." 
We'd hear a version of this years later coming from the mouth of Arnold 
Schwarzenegger! That powder Taurus had was pretty amazing stuff -lucky 
he didn't inhale any!
Doug:
  Reaching the wall of the tower, Taurus pulls out a  grappling hook and
 rope and gets it to hold fast on his first toss.  Conan suddenly whirls
 to see a fourth lion pouncing. Conan lashes out with his sword, killing
  the beast. The two men begin to scale the tower.  They marvel at the 
surface, encrusted  with uncountable jewels and gemstones. Reaching the 
top, Taurus tells Conan to walk  the perimeter of the tower's landing to
 look for guards below. With  Conan distracted, Taurus sneaks inside the
 door and shuts it behind him. Conan senses this potential treachery and
 returns to the door. Conan hears a sound from within like a man being 
strangled, and Taurus' limp body falls back through the door into the 
barbarian's arms.  Bearing only small  needle-like marks on his neck, 
Taurus is cast aside as Conan cautiously enters the room. Amid caskets 
of jewels, Conan moves forward until he is smitten on the shoulder by an
 acidic liquid.  Suddenly a  giant  black spider swings down and 
attacks. Conan evades the spider's first attack,  but before he can 
reach the door the creature encompasses the barbarian in a sticky, 
constricting web. Conan is able to grab one of the heavy jewel boxes and
 hurls it at the giant arachnid, crushing its head.


 
 
Karen:
 I was very taken with the way Smith drew the tower -glimmering, almost 
in motion it seemed. The coloring no doubt enhances this; I'd like to 
see the original comic book coloring for a comparison. The fight with 
the spider was brief but exciting. Earlier Conan had remembered a story 
he heard, that Yara, the priest of the tower, had once turned a prince 
into a tiny spider. Perhaps this was another victim of the sorcerer, 
although much larger?
Doug:
  Conan enters a door he'd not seen previously during his conflict with 
the spider.  Entering and descending some steps, he sees a large green 
elephantine idol seated on a throne.  As the Cimmerian approaches, he is
 stopped in his tracks by fear when  the creature begins to move. It 
looks around sightlessly, assuming that  Yara has come to torture it -- 
from his words, this has apparently been a regular occurrence by both 
fire and the racks. Conan hesitantly speaks to it,  and the creature 
names himself as Yag-Kosha.  Conan tells the green elephant that he will
 not harm him; in turn, Yag-Kosha asks Conan to come closer so that he 
may touch  the barbarian. Conan does so a bit too willingly for my 
tastes (no way... I'm thinking no way -- it's gotta be a trick!), and 
Yag-Kosha begins to speak of the origins of his people and how he came 
to be in this place.  He reveals that he is an ancient  space traveler 
who came to Earth long enough ago that he witnessed apes become men.  
Eventually his people died out, and Yag-Kosha was the  last of his kind.
  He later taught a pupil named Yara, a sorcerer already gifted in the 
black arts.  Once Yag-Kosha had given of enough knowledge to make Yara 
truly his master, the elephantine man was imprisoned by the  scheming 
Yara.  The very tower which he had built for Yara in but a day now 
served as his confines.


 
Karen:
 The elephant man's tale is a bitterly sad one. Even the barbarian is 
moved by it. Smith does a fabulous job here. Yag-Kosha is brilliantly 
drawn, not ridiculous but imbued with a tragic nobility. Again, the 
level of detail is stunning. Look at the pattern on the drapes, on the 
small amulets Yag-Kosha wears on his tusks, vines growing up sides of 
buildings - Smith was really thinking and putting it all into this art.


 
Doug:
  Yag-Kosha asks Conan to kill him.  Yag-Kosha tells the barbarian to 
plunge his sword into the alien's heart and then take the Heart of the 
Elephant jewel and set it before Yara. He must then recite an 
incantation which will finally do in the corrupt sorcerer.  Conan does 
all this. Yara is sleeping in a nearby chamber.  Conan enters the room 
and shouts Yara's name, causing the sorcerer to  awaken and curse Conan.
  Conan places the gem, now blood-red, on a table and  Yara is magically
 drawn into the gem. Yara begins to shrink, stepping out of his clothes 
and eventually becoming the size of a mouse.  Yara somehow scales the 
smooth surface of the gem and disappears into it.  Conan's eyes widen 
when he sees an image of a majestic  Yag-Kosha awaiting. Conan, having 
been warned by Yag-Kosha to flee, leaves  the tower, getting far enough 
away to see  The Tower of the Elephant collapse.  The Heart of the 
Elephant was not to be his -- but what an adventure! 


 
Karen:
 The coloring of the sphere is wonderful and once again, I have to agree
 that this modern coloring technique can bring a lot of life to the art.
 I think this is one of the more fantastical Conan comics I've ever 
read. It just has more fantasy elements than a lot of the stories. 
There's very little swordplay but it still manages to be an exciting 
tale.