This installment was published in Fantastic Adventures between 1941 and 1942 just as our world was readying itself for a global war, and elements of this certainly slip into Burroughs’ writings.
In Escape on Venus Carson Napier and the lovely
Duare seem even more cursed with “adventure” than usually as every time
they turn around they are being captured and enslaved.
At the end Carson of Venus
Duare had returned to Vepaja with her father because everyone assumed
Carson was dead, why anyone would ever assume that is beyond me as he’s
escaped so many horrific fates countless times, and it’s back home that
poor Duare was condemned to death by her own people for breaking their
sacred law by falling in love with Carson and taking him as her mate.
It’s no surprise that Carson arrived in the nick of time to spirit her
away in his wonderful Anotar (what Duare named Carson’s plane) and the
two flew off to hopefully find peace somewhere on Amotar/Venus.
Escape on Venus
begins with Carson informing his love that things back in Korva have
changed quite a bit because after he rescued the king’s daughter he had
been made a prince. So things are looking up. This of course means that
things are about to get really, really bad. While on route back to Korva
and safety they encounter one of the most devastating occurrences on
Amotar when the two layers of clouds that protect the surface world
parts. Needless to say direct contact with sunlight on a planet this
close to the sun is not good. Immediately the ocean begins to boil and
it is all that Carson can do just to keep his craft in the air as
violent storms form and buffet our two heroes. For days a colossal
tornado carries Carson and Duare thousands of miles off course until
eventually the skies calm down and they are able to land to resupply and
get some rest.
They should never ever land. In this book anytime
they touch ground leads to disaster. At one point Duare comments, after
their umpteenth capture and escape, that they must be jinxed. Even when
they decide not to land they get shot out of the sky or have mechanical
problems that force them down. At some point one would start to wonder
if the work of a vengeful god is at hand.
Of
course what makes the repetitive nature of their constant enslavement
entertaining is the variety of creatures doing the capturing. In the
section “Slaves of the Fishmen” they are captured by an
amphibious race where bug-eyed gillmen enslave Carson and Duare. Carson
is given the job of hatchery security which entails watching over pools
of fish and preventing the local birds from flying down and making off
with them. He is slow to pick up on the fact that the little fish he is
guarding over are the progeny of the fishmen. How our heroes tend to
escape most of their predicaments in this book with his ray gun as most
of the races they encounter here don’t even take his weapon because they
don’t understand what it is. The other fascinating race, and eventual
captor, is the Brokol who apparently grow from trees. They look
completely humanoid except for a strange knot on their heads where they
were once attached to the tree they were “birthed” from. The apparent
ruler of these people is the goddess Loto-El-Ho-Ganja Kum O Raj (Most
High More Than Woman Of The Fire) who isn’t a plant person but actually
turns out to be Betty Callwell, an earth woman who had somehow been
mysteriously transported across space to Venus. She has no memories of
where she came from but when Carson mentions things about the United
States of America it begins to trigger memories and eventually she
vanishes back to Earth. This is briefly explained in an Editor Note and
is one of the more bizarre moments in the series as it is never truly
explained.
In section that strays from the standard first person
narrative of Carson Napier deals with our heroes landing to make repairs
and find the inhabitants of the city of Voo-ad to surprisingly
welcoming and hold banquets in their honor. This race is easily one of
the more bizarre creations by Burroughs as they are some kind of
androgynous amoeba like people who after a period of gluttony divide in
half. Certainly an interesting way to procreate but apparently it leads
to having no creativity or emotions. After being treated like royalty
the other shoe finally drops and Carson and Duare are drugged and soon
find themselves exhibits in a strange Museum of Natural History. It’s
while paralyzed and mounted that they meet Vik-yor who is one of the
rare ones of his race that doesn’t have a dividing line. Because of his
nature he has emotions and falls in love with Duare, but he is also a
jealous asshat so only agrees to rescue Duare and not Carson. This is
when the books narrative point of view changes to Duare but it is never
explained how the author back on Earth is getting this part of the story
when he is only psychically linked to Carson Napier. That quibble aside
it’s nice to get a different perspective on things and Duare is a great
character, so seeing him get to be the hero for a change is nice. And
though Burroughs' worlds are vast and varied they tend to be really
small when it comes to running into old friends and it's while hanging
as an exhibit that Napier meets up with Ero Shan, his old friend from
Havatoo, who built an airplane of his own based on Napier's designs.
When a storm forced him down over Voo-ad he found himself quickly made
into an exhibit. Venus is a small but very dangerous world.
The concluding section is “War on Venus”
where, because Carson is a glutton for punishment, he flies too close
to a major land battle between massive tanks that tower hundreds of feet
in the air, and is shot down. Carson, Duare and Ero Shan are captured,
Duare has to murder an officer to avoid rape, Carson shows off his
skills as a tank gunner, and between being an awesome warrior he and Ero
Shan bounce from being captured by one faction to another. It’s this
section that shows Burroughs’s disdain for the way war has become
mechanized and how honor among soldiers is important. Eventually Carson
and Duare are re-united and they escape…again. Once again the serial
fashion of these books may take getting use to for modern readers but
the sheer amount of creativity on display here makes this book worth
checking out.
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