Tarzan of the Apes
Edgar Rice Burroughs
ISBN: | 9781722371500 |
Publisher: | Createspace Independent Publishing Platform |
Published: | 5 July, 2018 |
Format: | Paperback |
Language: | English |
Editions: |
224 other editions
of this product
|
- Jungle Tales of Tarzan
- T16 Tarzan&city of Gold
- Tarzan & City of Gold
- Tarzan & Golden Lion
- Tarzan And The Jewels of Opar
- Tarzan The Terrible
- Tarzan Triumphant
- Tarzan Triumphant
- Tarzan and the Ant Men
- Tarzan and the Ant Men
- Tarzan and the Ant-Men
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- Tarzan and the City of Gold
- Tarzan and the City of Gold
- Tarzan and the Forbidden City
- Tarzan and the Forbidden City
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- Tarzan and the Foreign Legion
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- Tarzan and the Leopard Men
- Tarzan and the Leopard Men
- Tarzan and the Lion Man
- Tarzan and the Lion Man (Tarzan Series #17)
- Tarzan and the Lost Empire
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- Tarzan and the Madman
- Tarzan and the Madman
- Tarzan and the Tarzan Twins
- Tarzan and the Tarzan Twins
- Tarzan and the Valley of Gold
- Tarzan and the ant-men.
- Tarzan at the Earth's Core
- Tarzan at the Earth's Core
- Tarzan of The Apes
- Tarzan of the Apes
- Tarzan the Invincible
- Tarzan the Magnificent
- Tarzan the Magnificent
- Tarzan the Untamed
- Tarzan's Quest
- Tarzan's Quest #20 (Ballantine White Cover, 24975)
- Tarzan, Lord of the Jungle
- Tarzan, Lord of the Jungle
- Tarzan: The Epic Adventures
- Tarzan: The Epic Adventures
- Tarzan: the Lost Adventure
- The Beasts of Tarzan
- The Beasts of Tarzan
- The Lost Adventure (Tarzan)
- The Return Of Tarzan Volume 2
- The Return of Tarzan
- The Return of Tarzan
- The Son of Tarzan
- The Son of Tarzan
Tarzan of the Apes
Edgar Rice Burroughs
Tarzan of the Apes is very much a product of its age: replete with bloodthirsty natives and a bulky, swooning American Negress, and haunted by what zoo specialists now call charismatic megafauna (great beasts snarling, roaring, and stalking, most of whom would be out of place in a real African jungle). Burroughs countervails such incorrectness, however, with some rather unattractive representations of white civilization-mutinous, murderous sailors, effete aristos, self-involved academics, and hard-hearted cowards. At Tarzan's heart rightly lies the resourceful and hunky title character, a man increasingly torn between the civil and the savage, for whom cutlery will never be less than a nightmare. The passages in which the nut-brown boy teaches himself to read and write are masterly and among the book's improbable, imaginative best. How tempting it is to adopt the ten-year-old's term for letters-"little bugs" And the older Tarzan's realization that civilized "men were indeed more foolish and more cruel than the beasts of the jungle," while not exactly a new notion, is nonetheless potent. The first in Burroughs's serial is most enjoyable in its resounding oddities of word and thought, including the unforgettable "When Tarzan killed he more often smiled than scowled; and smiles are the foundation of beauty." Includes unique illustrations.
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