Clark Ashton Smith was a renowned author, poet, sculptor, and painter, hailing from Long Valley, California. Born in 1893, Smith developed a keen interest in storytelling at a very young age, and by the time he was eleven, he had already started writing. Despite spending only the first five years in grammar school, Smith was an autodidact who exhibited remarkable intellectual prowess in his sculptures, verse, painting, and prose. At the age of seventeen, he began selling magazines to reputable publications such as "The Overland Monthly" and "The Black Cat," among others. Two years later, his published collection of poetry was ranked alongside the works of esteemed poets like Bryant, Chatterton, and Rosetti. However, Smith temporarily halted his writing endeavors and only resumed when he was thirty-five, producing his seminal work, "The End of the Story," which cemented his reputation as a notable prose writer.
Smith's success with "The End of the Story" inspired him to write more pseudo-scientific, fantastic, and macabre novels that gained equal popularity among readers. His work has been featured in over fifty magazines, including "The Mencken Smart Set," "The Yale Review," "The Philippines Magazine," "The London Mercury," "Magazine of Verse," "Asia," and "Munsey's." Moreover, his poetry has been anthologized in more than a dozen collections. Smith was also a part of the pulp magazine Weird Tales, where he, along with H.P. Lovecraft and Robert E. Howard, became famous contributors. Today, Smith is primarily remembered for his poetic and literary friendship with Lovecraft, which lasted from 1922 until Lovecraft's death in 1937.