Barsoom series

In 1911, Edgar Rice Burroughs, now better known as the creator of the character Tarzan, began his writing career with A Princess of Mars, a rousing tale of pulp adventure on the planet Barsoom or Mars. Several sequels followed.

Contents

John Carter

The novel tells of earthman John Carter. A form of teleportation mysteriously transports him to the planet Barsoom, where he encounters both formidable alien creatures resembling the beasts of ancient myth and various humanoids.

As mortals knew him

Carter stood 6′2″ tall and had close-cropped black hair and steel-gray eyes. His character and courtesy exemplified the ideals of the antebellum South. A Virginian who served as a captain in the American Civil War, he struck it rich by finding gold in Arizona after the end of hostilities.

While hiding from Apaches in a cave, he found himself mysteriously transported to Mars, where he subsequently had many adventures. The less intense gravity of Mars compared to Earth gave him demigod-like strength.

Mysteriously transported back to Earth, he spent the last years of his life in a small cottage on the Hudson River in New York. He died there on March 4 1886.

The immortal being

Burroughs portrays John Carter as an immortal being. In the opening pages of A Princess of Mars, the author reveals to the reader that Carter can remember no childhood, having always been a man of about thirty years old. Many generations of families referred to him as "Uncle John," but he always lived to see all the members of the families grow old and die, while he remained young. After travelling to Mars, he seemed to find his true calling in life as a warrior-savior of the planet's inhabitants.

His "death" actually represents leaving his inanimate body behind on Earth while he travelled about Mars in an identical body. Carter revealed that he mastered the process of travelling to and from Earth and Mars and could travel between the two at will. Accordingly, his Earth body lies in a special tomb that can only be opened from the inside.

Fauna

The humanoid "Red Martians", "White Martians", "Yellow Martians" and "Black Martians" resemble Homo sapiens in almost every respect except that they reproduce oviparously. The warlike "Green Martians" have four arms and tusks, and stand approximately four meters tall.

Many Barsoomians generally display warlike and honor-bound characteristics. The technology of the tales runs the gamut from dueling sabers to ray guns and aircraft, with the discovery of powerful ancient devices or research into the development of new ones often forming a plot device. The natives also eschew clothing other than jewelry, providing a stimulating subject for illustrators of the stories.

Domesticated animals include the thoat.

Environment

Although loosely inspired by astronomical speculation of the time that pictured Mars as a formerly Earthlike world now becoming more inhospitable to life, Burroughs's Barsoom tales never aspired to anything other than exciting escapism.

Legacy

The tales seem somewhat dated today, but they showed great innovation for the time of writing, and the exciting stories caught the interest of many readers, helping to inspire serious interest in Mars and in space exploration.

Many later science fiction works, from the Flash Gordon and Buck Rogers films of the 1930s, to Ray Bradbury's The Martian Chronicles, to the Star Wars films, to the Mars Trilogy of Kim Stanley Robinson also offer nods in Burroughs's direction. Robert A Heinlein's novel The Number of the Beast and Alan Moore's graphic novels of The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen directly reference Barsoom.

The John Carter books enjoyed another wave of popularity in the 1970s, with Vietnam War veterans who said they could identify with Carter, fighting in a war on another planet.

The series

The American copyright of the five earliest novels has expired, and they appear on a number of free e-text sites. The Australian copyright of the remainder, not including John Carter of Mars (1964), has also expired and they too appear online.

External links

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