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Loading... A Princess of Mars (Modern Library Classics)by Edgar Rice Burroughs
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will love Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. Link to a review on my personal website. ( )First book I ever read. I loved these books. I've been meaning to read this for what seems like forever and I'm so glad I did. John Carter is unspeakably heroic and nicely tragic in his role as manly defender of Martian Princesses and befriender of Martian dogs. Dates surprisingly well. Wonderful pulpy goodness. This is the Citizen Kane of Sci-Fi novels. I'm not saying it's better that Bradbury, Dick, or Asimov and the like. But they owe Burroughs a little credit. One thing that I noticed was his ability to stop on a dime and change direction. He can pack more action into two or three pages than many could in a whole chapter. It's a quick read and I would recomend it to anyone looking for a great old school sci-fi novel. 0.070 seconds to build listing no reviews | add a review
Amazon.com (ISBN 0345331389, Mass Market Paperback)Although Edgar Rice Burroughs (1875-1950) is justifiably famous as the creator of Tarzan of the Apes, that uprooted Englishman was not his only popular hero. Burroughs's first sale (in 1912) was A Princess of Mars, opening the floodgates to one of the must successful--and prolific--literary careers in history. This is a wonderful scientific romance that perhaps can be best described as early science fiction melded with an epic dose of romantic adventure. A Princess of Mars is the first adventure of John Carter, a Civil War veteran who unexpectedly find himself transplanted to the planet Mars. Yet this red planet is far more than a dusty, barren place; it's a fantasy world populated with giant green barbarians, beautiful maidens in distress, and weird flora and monstrous fauna the likes of which could only exist in the author's boundless imagination. Sheer escapism of the tallest order, the Martian novels are perfect entertainment for those who find Tarzan's fantastic adventures aren't, well, fantastic enough. Although this novel can stand alone, there are a total of 11 volumes in this classic series of otherworldly, swashbuckling adventure. --Stanley Wiater(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:58:10 -0400) The first test round has been closed. Visit the Open Shelves Classification group for details. |
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