<p>Clark Ashton Smith came in touch with August Derleth in 1930 when following H. P. Lovecraft&rsquo;s instruction Smith forwarded to Derleth the manuscript of Lovecraft&rsquo;s tale &ldquo;The Whisperer in Darkness.&rdquo; Derleth replied immediately and included without preliminaries several stories of his own. Thus began a correspondence a friendship and ultimately a business relationship that extended more than thirty years.</p><p>&nbsp;</p><p>The letters of Clark Ashton Smith and August Derleth afford an intimate glimpse into the lives of two working writers. They offer a rare opportunity to see how Derleth managed his writing and also his growing publishing company Arkham House even to the particulars of content selection royalty payments and so on. Derleth&rsquo;s concern for Smith&rsquo;s well-being is manifestly evident as is the commitment of Derleth and Donald Wandrei to publishing Smith&rsquo;s greatest book&mdash;even if it meant twenty-two years of enduring patience to do so. For his part Smith clearly regarded Derleth as a friend colleague and financial lifeline. Even if their interests somewhat diverged in their later years they both cherished each other&rsquo;s association and worked together where they feasibly could. These letters chronicle the heyday and then the demise of <em>Weird Tales </em>and other pulp magazines; the establishment of what long remained the leading small press in the weird fiction field; and many other personal and literary issues that illuminate the minds and personalities of their authors.</p>
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