The “Carson Napier of Venus series" was the last major
series created by Edgar Rice Burroughs and nicely ties into his “shared
universe” of Barsoom, Tarzan and Pellucidar.
The first book in the series is Pirates of Venus which was serialized
in Argosy magazine in 1932 and then two years later released in novel
form.
In Pirates of Venus, much like in
Burroughs’s other books, we get a narrator who gets his story in a
rather unique fashion, and in this case it is through telepathy. The
author is not given a name but he lives in Tarzana, California so we can
assume it to be Burroughs, and he is visited by Jason Gridley whose
exploits he wrote about in Tarzan at the Earth’s Core.
The author is contacted psychically by Carson Napier who has plans to
travel into outer space, he originally wanted to try for Venus as it is
closer but all scientists agree that nothing could survive on that
planet’s surface. So he switches targets to Mars and wants the author to
use their psychic rapport to chronicle his adventures. Sure, why not.
His
mission has quite the rocky start as in all their calculations they
never took the moon’s gravitational pull into account and thus Napier’s
rocket veers wildly off course, heads for the sun and certain death.
Lucky for Napier his ship is caught in the gravity well of Venus and he
is pulled toward the deadly green ball. I personally love Burroughs’s
method for space travel between planets, no silly landing your craft
with retro-rockets or some such silly sci-fi device, no our hero jumps
out of the spacecraft as it plummets towards the planet’s surface and
deploys a parachute so that he can safely descend. What’s great is that
this wasn’t some last ditch effort to survive crashing on an alien, this
was his plan all along for how to land on Mars. He never ended to
return to Earth which is why he needed someone back home who could
telepathically communicate with him to tell his story.
Lucky for
Napier, Venus isn’t the unsurvivable hellhole that Earth’s top minds
thought it was, in fact it is just teeming with life (unfortunately much
of it will try and kill him). Napier parachutes into a forest of trees
that reach thousands of feet into the air and are populated by dangerous
creatures, one of which immediately tries to kill him. Men armed with
spears arrive in the nick of time to save him and he is brought back to a
city built in the enormous tree boles. He learns that he has landed on
Amtor, as the Venusians call their planet, and is now the
guest/prisoners of the Vepajan people. He learns that they are a race
that discovered the secret of immortality and many residents are
thousands of years old. All things aren’t so rosy as Napier finds out
that the Vepajan people were once part of a greater society consisting
of four classes and who lived happily by the millions on thousands of
islands, that is until a criminal named Thor formed the revolutionary
group Thorists. He preyed on the weak minds of the lower class and led
them to attack the ruling class; many like the Vepajan fled to live in
classless tree cities. The Thorists now have to hunt for Vepajan people
as those hated upper class members were the best and the brightest while
the Thorists consist mostly of unintelligent brutes and so they need to
raid Vepajan cities to steal people to help keep their society running.
Reading Edgar Rice Burroughs you certainly have no problem discerning
just how he thought of communists.
While learning all there is to
know about the people of Amtor he discovers that one of his next door
neighbours is a stunningly beautiful woman, and he falls in love at
first sight. If you guessed she’s a princess give yourself a cookie.
What follows is your standard Burroughs adventure story; hero will
encounter many dangerous obstacles to his love, one being the girl
herself who is even forbidden to talk to him, our hero will save her
life on several occasions (damsels get snatched a lot in these books),
and he will start to re-shape this new world he now finds himself in.
Deciding to be a pirate is certainly a unique way to shake-things up and
that is exactly what Napier decides to do.
Will
Carson Napier win the affection of the Princess Duare? Can he keep out
of the clutches of the evil Thorists? Just why in the hell are birdmen
not ruling this place instead of being the meek servants that Napier
meets? All these questions and more will be answered in these exciting
pages.
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