Swords of Mars
3.5/5
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About this ebook
Swords of Mars was written in the year 1934 by Edgar Rice Burroughs. This book is one of the most popular novels of Edgar Rice Burroughs, and has been translated into several other languages around the world.
This book is published by Booklassic which brings young readers closer to classic literature globally.
Edgar Rice Burroughs
Edgar Rice Burroughs (1875-1950) is the creator of Tarzan, one of the most popular fictional characters of all time, and John Carter, hero of the Barsoom science fiction series. Burroughs was a prolific author, writing almost 70 books before his death in 1950, and was one of the first authors to popularize a character across multiple media, as he did with Tarzan’s appearance in comic strips, movies, and merchandise. Residing in Hawaii at the time of the attack on Pearl Harbour in 1941, Burroughs was drawn into the Second World War and became one of the oldest war correspondents at the time. Edgar Rice Burroughs’s popularity continues to be memorialized through the community of Tarzana, California, which is named after the ranch he owned in the area, and through the Burrough crater on Mars, which was named in his honour.
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Reviews for Swords of Mars
154 ratings3 reviews
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5I cannot give this book (#8 from the Barsoom series) more than 3 stars. Why? Because - contrary to most of the preceding Barsoom books - this story could for 80% or more have been set on Earth (or anywhere in the Universe, if it comes to that). All the characters (with the exception of one newly 'invented' one) behave like Earth people and there are even hardly any non-earthly events or settings. The inhabitants of this book eat in eathouses, walk home through small streets, the houses have doors and windows, that are not different from the ones in my house, people even knock on them when they want to come in etc. etc.
This really is a pity! I liked the former books because of their SF aspects, especially because of the strange creatures with strange un-earthly habits.
Another disappointment is that the book stops suddenly. Confronted with the villains, John Carter is at the point of simply believing them in their obvious lies, and while he is walking away to make another journey to find his missing Princess, she suddenly appears as a 'deus ex machina'. And that is it. The book is finished. No real climax, nothing.
In fact - given my criticism above - two stars would an adequate rating, but the Barsoom series as a whole, of which his book is part after all, makes this unreasonable. - Rating: 2 out of 5 stars2/5John Carter hunts assassins, leading him to the moon (of Mars!).2/4 (Indifferent).It takes a long time before it gets to anything interesting. For a while it seemed like it might redeem itself, with an avalanche of wacky pulp ideas. And then the last chapter is written like a summary for an entire other book that I guess Burroughs got too bored to bother writing.
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5This is the eighth book in Burroughs' John Carter series of books set on Barsoom, a fictionalized and pulpy version of Mars. I've read and enjoyed the previous seven in the series before, but I was somewhat disappointed with this one.The initial plot of the book involves John Carter having trouble with the assassin's guild in the Barsoomian city of Zodanga. He has sent agents to wage a clandestine war against them, but they have failed. Naturally, he decides to travel to Zodanga by himself and in disguise to take care of the problem personally. For those unfamiliar with the series, back in Warlord of Mars (book three in the series) John Carter became the acknowledged warlord of the entirety of Barsoom, in addition to being a prince of the city of Helium. Him setting out would be like, say, sending Dick Cheney off to hunt down Osama bin Laden because the CIA hasn't been able to track him down.Once he reaches Zodanga, the first person he meets is an aspiring assassin who introduces him to a obsessively paranoid mad genius scientist who is the rival of another mad scientsist who happens to have the head of the Zodangan assassin's guild in his pay. He takes up employment with the mad scientist (who is building a ship capable of interplanetary flight and a mechanical "brain" to control it) and begins some rather clumsy efforts to infiltrate the assassin's guild.The story then takes a left hand turn, as the assassins and the rival mad scientist use their own interpanetary ship to kidnap John Carter's great love Dejah Thoris (the Princess of Mars from book one in the series) and whisk her away to the martian moon Thuria. John Carter immediately flies back to Helium to prevent the kidnapping, arrives late, and then takes a single warrior with him and sets out to use the first mad scientists' ship to follow to Thuria.Once there (and, oddly, having shrunk so that he and his companion are the same proportionate size to Thuiria as they normally are to Barsoom, which apparently happens to everyone who visits Thuria), he immediately finds the other ship, but is taken prisoner by invisible enemies. There is a lot of intrigue, other prisoners (including a very bizarre alien) join up with him in a plan to escaope, yet another princess falls madly in vole with Carter and offers to help him and his companions escape. The head of the Zodangan assassin's guild is so impressed with Carter's fighting skill he pledges his loyalty to him, and Carter manages to fight his way out of captivity. Dejah is kidnapped again, but manages to free herself in time for Carter to rescue her.All of the elements of a good Barsoom story are here, but they are so disjointed that they don't add up to a great story. It reads like Burroughs just couldn't make up his mind what direction he wanted to go in, so he just threw in everything including the kitchen sink.