T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
458.1 | | AKOV68::BOYAJIAN | A disgrace to the forces of evil | Thu Mar 12 1987 02:38 | 4 |
| If you mean EDGAR RICE BURROUGHS: MASTER OF ADVENTURE, it was
by Richard Lupoff, not Philip Jos� Farmer.
--- jerry
|
458.2 | Burroughs was a part of all our lives | MORRIS::MLOEWE | Low_in_sugar Low_in_salt..Lowenbrau | Thu Mar 12 1987 09:38 | 12 |
| Philip Jose' Farmer incidently is a big fan of Burroughs. I remember
reading in one of his books that he had his entire collection in the
garage and I believe a fire destroyed them. Farmer also wrote a
book titled "Tarzan Alive", in which he narrates an actual confrontation
with Tarzan himself. He states that Edgar Rice Burroughs actually
wrote about a true character. The man (Tarzan) according to Farmer
looked only 30 years old and was in great physical shape for a man of
actually 80 years of age. I read this book as a young teenager and
he had me going there, but I just kept remembering I picked this book
up in the Science Fiction aisle.
Mike_L
|
458.3 | Tarzan and Farmer | CACHE::MARSHALL | hunting the snark | Thu Mar 12 1987 09:50 | 16 |
| re PJF & ERB:
Farmer also wrote "Lord Tyger" about a "real" Tarzan that a wealthy
Englishman is trying to breed in the jungle.
And then there was the book describing the "meeting" of Doc Savage
and Tarzan (_A_Feast_Unknown_ [?]). The meeting actually being a
duel to the death, arranged by a group of immortals. The winner
would himself be admitted to their ranks.
/
( ___
) ///
/
|
458.4 | "Ho, horta! Feel; the bite of my steel tooth!" | ERASER::KALLIS | Hallowe'en should be legal holiday | Thu Mar 12 1987 15:22 | 27 |
| Re .3:
1) _A Feast Unknown_ was an extremely sexually explicit book that
included numerous matings, only one of which was "normal." It was
printed semi-underground, and is an interesting, but not particularly
pleasant read. It had two colateral sequels: _The Mad Goblin_,
which was the further adventures of the Doc Savage character; and
_Lord of the Trees, which was the further adventures of the Tarzan
character (neither was called by the name of the character they
represented): both ended with the same battle at the same place;
neither had further sexual intervals.
2) Farmer also wrote a pastiche, _The Adventure of the Peerless
Peer_, where Sherlock Holmes and Dr. Watson met Tarzan during World
War I, while on a mission from the Brisish government. Other
characters who made cameos in the book are G-8 (an aviator) and
The Shadow, both of which appeared as pulp-magazine characters,
particularly in the 1930s. Quite entertaining. In this book, Holmes
and Watson are referred to by their names, and Tarzan is (correctly)
Lord Greystroke.
3) _Tarzan Alive_, the "biography" of Tarzan, and _Doc Savage: His
Apocalyptic Life_, the "biography" of Clark Savage, Jr., both appeared
first in hardcover, then in paperback.
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
458.5 | THE FARMER FEEDS US ALL | AQUA::ROST | | Thu Mar 12 1987 16:40 | 11 |
|
I stand corrected. The book I have I believe is the Lupoff
one rather than the Farmer.. Sorry, I wrote that from memory
before checking my shelf.
The Farmer books, "Mad Goblin" and "Lord of the Trees" were
published together in a single paperback which I read. I don't know
if I still have that or "Feast" which was really pretty sick.
I'm amazed at some of the stuff Farmer has done which is close
to pornographic in nature!! But that's a topic for another note,
eh?
|
458.6 | What's in your time capsule? | SDSVAX::SWEENEY | Pat Sweeney | Fri Jul 03 1987 22:35 | 2 |
| I have a first edition of Tarzan of the Apes. It's not a collectible,
but it might be for my great grand-children.
|
458.7 | | AKOV75::BOYAJIAN | I want a hat with cherries | Tue Jul 07 1987 02:04 | 22 |
| re:.6
When you say that it's "not a collectible", do you mean that
it's not in collectible condition? A first edition of TARZAN
OF THE APES is *very* collectible unless it's literally falling
apart (or is an "ex libris" copy that's been rebound).
By the way, the book that Steve refers to, THE ADVENTURE OF
THE PEERLESS PEER was yanked out of circulation after it
appeared in paperback because the Burroughs estate complained
about it (they hadn't given permission for Tarzan to be
used, and he's not a public domain character yet). I don't
know if they even knew about the earlier hardcover, since it
was from a rather obscure publisher, Aspen Press). The paper-
back is quite a collectible item and the hardcover is *very*
collectible. Fortunately, I have both.
A revised version (changing the Tarzan character sufficiently
to appease the Burroughs estate) appeared under a slightly
different title (which I can't think of at the moment) in a
recent Farmer book, THE GRAND ADVENTURE.
--- jerry
|