Half of the battle for me is finding the author that will keep me interested, and also out of trouble. Some authors whether or not they are the most talented just feel better to read. I have a number of Conan books here and I have some sense of the world that Howard created and I will try again to pick it up. I did read "The Phoenix on the Sword" recently and it went well. Some people are probably very familiar with the world of Conan and they can handle the assortment of Conan titles. The basics should be contained in Howard's short stories. It took me a while to accept them because they are very unique. I don't know any author that writes like he does. Too top it off, he was still smart after he did his boxing matches.
This Sprague character is another Poul. Hopefully he will get better too. There is one more thing that I was going to say and than hold my tounge, and that is that the works of Edgar Allen Poe are cumbersome, or did he just write a small collection? Well nobody talks about them ever.
Well, yes, Howard was quite bright. Not necessarily educated, but very bright, and very talented. He was a complex, fascinating individual, and more often than not a fine writer.
The Hyborian Age of the Conan and Kull tales is rather complex in some ways, a melange of many culture and periods in history... but it hangs together rather well, overall.
I wonder if you've read other fantasies which Howard wrote... several of those are equally good, and often a good deal more poignant.
As for Sprague de Camp... the man died a few years ago, I'm afraid, after a very long life and career (his first book was published in serial form in 1939):
L. Sprague de Camp - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Anderson has also passed on, and had a rather lengthy writing career himself:
Poul Anderson - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
And I don't think they needed to improve, particularly -- at least, not in general (though individual works could have used such). They were each successful in both the remunerative and artistic sense; as I said, they were simply different from Howard or Lovecraft.
Speaking of which... Poe's work can be cumbersome at times, but overall he had a rich, often musical style (if somewhat florid)... and certainly he remains, after more than a century and a half, one of the greatest and most important writers America has ever produced. As for how much Poe produced (fiction, I won't bring in his verse or critical essays, etc.)... this:
Edgar Allan Poe Society of Baltimore - Works - Tales
And I'm not sure what you mean when you say nobody ever talks about them... Poe's name crops up here rather frequently, let alone other places; he is taught in schools; and his works still sell rather well; not to mention the number of adaptations (film, television, comics, music, etc.) which have been made of his works....
Connavar: I suppose it depends on one's definition of S&S. Certainly Vance saw himself in that light, as did most of his fellow writers, when it came to the Dying Earth and related types of tales. And, again, I would argue that, while different, several of those writers are on a level with or somewhat above REH when it comes to the field, at least in many ways. Some of them have been quite influential themselves, though Leiber, certainly, is almost impossible to imitate. Andre Norton has had an enormous impact on generations of readers; and so on...
Again, it depends on the perspective one is looking from....