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Fists of Iron — Round 2

Robert E. Howard

First published 2014
Series The Collected Boxing Fiction of Robert E. Howard #2
Publisher The Robert E. Howard Foundation Press
Format Hardcover
Type Collection
Cover art Tom Gianni
Pages xxii+329
Price $44.00

Edited by Patrice Louinet, Christopher Gruber and Mark Finn.
Limited to 200 numbered copies.
"First Printing" on the copyright page.
Cover artist credited on the rear jacket flap; cover art is also signed.
This volume features the character Sailor Steve Costigan.

No ISBN on record — searching by title and author.

Page Title Author(s) Type
3 The Pit of the Serpent Robert E. Howard Short Story
21 By the Law of the Shark Robert E. Howard Short Story
39 The Bull Dog Breed Robert E. Howard Short Story
57 Sailors' Grudge Robert E. Howard Short Story
75 Fist and Fang Robert E. Howard Short Story
97 Winner Take All Robert E. Howard Short Story
113 Waterfront Fists Robert E. Howard Short Story
146 The Champion of the Forecastle Robert E. Howard Short Story
165 Alleys of Peril Robert E. Howard Short Story
181 Waterfront Law Robert E. Howard Short Story
196 Hard-Fisted Sentiment Robert E. Howard Short Story
210 A Student of Sockology Robert E. Howard Short Fiction
210 The Yellow Cobra Robert E. Howard Short Story
229 Texas Fists Robert E. Howard Short Story
249 The Fightin'est Pair Robert E. Howard Short Story
266 Cultured Cauliflowers Robert E. Howard Short Story
285 Blue River Blues Robert E. Howard Short Story
301 Sailors' Grudge (Outline) Robert E. Howard Short Fiction
302 The Battling Sailor (Incomplete) Robert E. Howard Short Fiction
308 Untitled ("It was the end...") Robert E. Howard Short Fiction
311 Untitled ("The night Sailor Steve Costigan...") Robert E. Howard Short Fiction
314 Alleys of Peril (Synopsis) Robert E. Howard Short Fiction
315 Untitled Mike O'Brien Fragment ("Help! Help! They're murderin' me!") Robert E. Howard Short Fiction
319 The Lord of the Ring (part 2) Patrice Louinet Essay
vii Tall Lying in the Far East: Robert E. Howard, Sailor Steve Costigan, and the Narrative Idyll Mark Finn Essay