I don't think that contradicts my general opinion of "classics" as being old novels foisted off on the young, generally forcibly, thereby ruining their love for reading by making them base their first impression of an entire genre on what is fundamentally that genre's rough draft.
Lord Dunsany, CS Lewis, even Edgar Allan Poe, are fantasy's rough draft. Howard is far more refined as a "genre" author, and he proved he could do multiple genres too--westerns, horror, sf, fantasy, and sea stories, among others.
As for Howard, life is short and books about mighty thews make me want to vomit. Plus I know a hell of a lot about the Hyborian Age than I do about, say, Idaho, because yes, it has been influential. Influential and the opposite of what I want in a novel.
You say that like Howard uses "mighty thews" all the time, or hell, that it's even a standard phrasing. It's not. In fact, having read every Conan, Kull, and Solomon Kane story, I can't say I ever remember reading that exact phrasing. I do remember reading about mighty thews in an ERB story, The Monster Men, however. I also did a Google Book search just now and turned up several Howard books that include that phrased, but all in the introductions written by the editor and not by Howard himself. Also, what exactly do you want in a novel? Like everyone, some Howard is bad (heck, even some Gaiman and Chabon are bad).
And yes, Conan is undergoing a revival these days, but Howard is not. This is a revival that is taking place in video games and movies and even comic books, and only after those in the actual written words of the author of the original text on which all of this is based.
This just shows you don't know what you're talking about. There are now three monthly standard comic books from Dark Horse, "Conan," "Kull," and "Solomon Kane." Del Rey has recently republished every Conan story, Solomon Kane story, and Kull story, and there are plans to republish Steve Costigan. And there's a new Solomon Kane movie set to drop soon as well.
... Howard is much like Lovecraft in that way. Conan is popular. Howard is not. Lovecraftian horror is popular. Lovecraft is not. Which says something about a fan of the genre's position or obligations regarding these authors, though I suspect you'd think it says something different from what it says to me.
Again, this shows how little knowledge you have on the subject. The Library of America, a very important grouping of literary who's who, has published a complete H.P. Lovecraft in the last few years, giving him a legitimate break into the realms of "literary" classics. Lovecraft also is still relevant in that Stephen King, Neil Gaiman, and other modern horror "masters" all cite Lovecraft's influence alongside even Poe.
Again - if you
haven't read anything by a particular author, you can in no way make a legitimate judgment about that author. It'd be like me going around saying "Harry Potter and The Half-Blood Prince is the worst movie ever filmed" when I haven't seen it yet. It's preposterous, rude, and judgmental based on zero exposure. If you had said you read "The Tower of the Elephant" by Howard and decided you didn't like the Conan stories, at least you'd have some basis upon which to make your claims.