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Back to the Stone Age by Edgar Rice…
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Back to the Stone Age (original 1937; edition 1937)

by Edgar Rice Burroughs

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227446,666 (3.77)8
Member:EmScape
Title:Back to the Stone Age
Authors:Edgar Rice Burroughs
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Back to the Stone Age by Edgar Rice Burroughs (1937)

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A fun Pellucidar entry with a lost Van Horst well into the primitive now, complete with dinosaurs and a mammoth he helps out, cannibals, pteranodons and more fun. Warlord fans should be entertained by the influence in this one with the feisty relationships, escapes and splitups.

http://gutenberg.net.au/ebooks06/0601031h.html

http://freesf.strandedinoz.com/wordpress/2012/05/back-to-the-stone-age-edgar-ric... ( )
  BlueTysonSS | May 9, 2012 |
During the events of Tarzan At The Earth's Core, the German Von Horst is seperated from the Tarzan's party by a stampede of prehistoric animals. On his own, Von Horst is captured by a flying reptile, paralyzed and left for a hatchling's first meal. Escaping the nest and rescuing a fellow captive, the german makes his way across Pellucidar finding unrequited love and adventure (It is a Burroughs novel). ( )
  Leischen | May 2, 2012 |
Seems all Mister Burroughs does is change the names of the hero and heroine in each book, dreams up a few more strange creatures and does the steady page-turning stories of being attacked, being rescued or saved by the breath of a zanth, and the develope of "true love." I'd like to have met La-Ja, the heroine in this one. She has spunk, and of course, is the perfect mate for Helmit Von Horst, the Aryan German of the tale. (One wonders if Burroughs was a secretive Nazi sympathizer in WWII?) ( )
  andyray | Aug 31, 2008 |
A young man is stranded in Pellucidar, the savage land at the earth's core.

This is a fairly typical Burroughs offering. It features many of his usual tricks: a talented hero trapped in a strange land, an episodic plot, lots of action, a strange creature that befriends the hero, and an otherworldly young woman who seems to loathe the man who loves her. Essentially, it's A Princess of Mars in Pellucidar.

Unfortunately, it's not nearly as good as Princess. It's fun, make no mistake, but it falls rather flat. The characters aren't too engaging. Burroughs's usually elegant prose, (always a bit more stilted when he's working in third person rather than first), doesn't add much to the tale. The episodic plot gets a little old after a while.

On the bright side, this is largely a stand-alone story, despite its connection to the rest of the Pellucidar series. Other than two brief points at the very beginning and at the end, this has little to do with the core series of books. The world is fully fleshed out and is introduced in such a way that the reader can pick up everything she needs to know as the story progresses. There's no reason that you'd need to read the rest of the Pellucidar books before tackling this one... but really, I can't imagine why you'd want to jump in right here. This is far from ERB's best work. You'd be better off starting with Tarzan of the Apes, A Princess of Mars or, if you're really into journeys to the centre of the earth, At the Earth's Core.

Recommended for hardcore ERB fans and those who've enjoyed the rest of the Pellucidar books. Others, look elsewhere in his bibliography for something of better quality. ( )
2 vote xicanti | Feb 26, 2008 |
Showing 4 of 4
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» Add other authors (5 possible)

Author nameRoleType of authorWork?Status
Edgar Rice Burroughsprimary authorall editionsconfirmed
Frazetta;, FrankCover artistsecondary authorsome editionsconfirmed
Mattingly, David B.Cover artistsecondary authorsome editionsconfirmed
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The eternal noonday sun of Pellucidar looked down upon such a scene as the outer crust of earth may not have witnessed for countless ages past, such a scene as only the inner world at the earth's core may produce today.
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(Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)
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BACK TO THE STONE AGE was originally titled SEVEN WORLDS TO CONQUER.
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Five hundred miles beneath the surface of the Earth lies a world of eternal day and endless horizons, in which dinosaurs still roam and cavemen hunt and terrors forgotten in the outer world still survive.

Young Wilhelm von Horst had been given up for lost. His comrades in the expedition had sailed to the surface without him, mourning the loss of their friend.

But von Horst had not died. His only companion a barbarian girl, he battles his way to safety through terrors inconceivable on the surface of the Earth.
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    LOST AT THE EARTH'S CORE

When the great  dirigible, the O-220, sailed away from the inner world of Pellucidar, it left behind one member of its crew, a brave man they thought lost forever amid the unexplored terrors of that primeval land.

That man was Lieutenant von Horst, and BACK TO THE STONE AGE is the story of the strange adventures that befell him as he wandered, alone and friendless, from one danger to another. Here also is the story of the love of this cultured man for a barbarian slave girl who discouraged him and ran way from him for a strange purpose that keeps the reader guessing to the very end.
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Amazon.com Product Description (ISBN 0441046363, Paperback)

A wonderful adventure in a long forgotten land full of dinosaurs and cavemen as only Edgar Rice Burroughs can tell it. "Young Wilhelm von Horst had been given up for lost. His comrades in the expedition had sailed to the surface without him, mourning the loss of their friend. But von Horst had not died. His only companion a barbarian girl, he battles his way to safety through terrors inconceivable on the surface of the Earth." Cover painting by Frank Frazetta.

(retrieved from Amazon Sun, 24 Feb 2013 20:04:39 -0500)

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