T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1264.1 | I lusted after Deja Thoris in my teen years... | QUARRY::petert | rigidly defined areas of doubt and uncertainty | Wed Mar 15 1995 10:27 | 22 |
| Oooh boy, that would be a long list! It's been a long time and
my memory is mixing them up as I go, so some of them are:
Wait, I forgot the Web! The Future Fantasy Bookstore comes to the
rescue! Here's a bunch:
Burroughs, Edgar R John Carter of Mars
Warlord of Mars
Chessmen of Mars
Fighting Men of Mars
Gods of Mars
Mastermind of Mars
Swords of Mars
Thuvia, Maid of Mars
Synthetic Men of Mars
Hmmm, wasn't there a A Princess of Mars too?
These were all the ones that had "Mars" in the title, which usually
indicates a John Carter novel. I've read a lot of these and they
tend to fall loosely into a swords and sorcery category, though the
sorcery stuff might be seen to be bad science ;-) Fun reads though.
PeterT
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1264.2 | John Carter CD | STKAI1::T_ANDERSSON | O tempora, o mores... | Wed Mar 15 1995 11:13 | 9 |
| I am not familiar with the John Carter books, but I own a
music CD entitled "John Carter Song Book" by Sten Hansson
(I think). This CD features some rather strange music, some
of which is intended to illustrate a game of Mars-style chess.
If you're interested, I can probably find the CD, wherever I
may have put it, and give you more details.
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1264.3 | BURROUGHS' MARS NOVELS | SALEM::EMOND | | Fri Mar 17 1995 12:18 | 13 |
|
A PRINCESS OF MARS (#1)
THE GODS OF MARS (#2)
THE WARLORD OF MARS (#3)
THUVIA, MAID OF MARS (#4)
THE CHESSMEN OF MARS (#5)
THE MASTER MIND OF MARS (#6)
A FIGHTING MAN OF MARS (#7)
SWORDS OF MARS (#8)
SYNTHETIC MEN OF MARS (#9)
LLANA OF GATHOL (#10)
JOHN CARTER OF MARS (#11)
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1264.4 | CARSON too!! | SNO78A::NANCARROW | | Sun Mar 19 1995 22:17 | 14 |
|
What no interest in CARSON of VENUS. Lesser known
but good when you get your teeth into it. At least
it is a bit more realistic in the personalities.
It was a shame the ERB passed on before he could
continue the MARTIAN series as he obviously planned.
No spoilers just read the series. However when reading
it remember that CLARKE, ASIMOV, HEINLEIN and the majority
of current writers grew up with these novels stirring their
imaginations.
Mike N.
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1264.5 | A caveat | MUNDIS::SSHERMAN | Steve Sherman @MFR DTN 865-2944 | Mon Mar 20 1995 06:41 | 19 |
| I read most of Burroughs' SF in my late teens, which is probably about the
right time. I can't second the recommendation of Carson of Venus, which
I didn't enjoy as much as I did John Carter, but YMMV.
The main thing is not to pick these up with the idea that you're going to
be reading what we now think of as science fiction. These are adventure
stories in an imagined setting that Burroughs chose to call Mars. If you
enjoy stories about a hero with a sword in his hand fighting off beasts
and baddies to protect the scantily clad but chaste body of his sweetie,
you'll like these books.
With regard to his influence on later writers, my recollection is that
Asimov and Clarke have both mentioned Hugo Gernsback as an inspiration
rather than ERB. One notable who *has* specifically mentioned the John
Carter books as a formative experience is Carl Sagan, which might explain
in part the Planetary Society's (IMO) excessive emphasis on manned explor-
ation of and the search for life on Mars.
Steve
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1264.6 | | REGENT::POWERS | | Mon Mar 20 1995 09:06 | 12 |
| > With regard to his influence on later writers, my recollection is that
> Asimov and Clarke have both mentioned Hugo Gernsback as an inspiration
> rather than ERB.
Gernsback, as a publisher and editor, was in a position to create the genre
we know as "sciece fiction." And he did, though I recall reading that he
tried to use the term "scientifiction" from the merger of "scientific
|||
fiction."
John Campbell would get the same reverence.
- tom]
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1264.7 | A very complicated personality | MUNDIS::SSHERMAN | Steve Sherman @MFR DTN 865-2944 | Mon Mar 20 1995 09:52 | 17 |
| >Gernsback, as a publisher and editor, was in a position to create the genre
>we know as "sciece fiction." And he did, though I recall reading that he
>tried to use the term "scientifiction" from the merger of "scientific
> |||
> fiction."
Right. The term was still (barely) in circulation when I first started
reading SF in the early fifties.
>John Campbell would get the same reverence.
Yes, indeed, as perhaps the most important of the founders of modern SF,
regrettably tempered by the memory of his advocacy for all manner of
pseudoscientific nonsense, such as the Dean machine and scientology,
which did a great disservice to the field and even to society at large.
Steve
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1264.8 | THANKS A LOT | CARECL::GROOTEMAAT | | Fri Mar 31 1995 07:02 | 7 |
| Thanks a lot,
I will start looking for the titles.
With kind regards,
Wafing Lin
|