This ninth book in the Tarzan series was first published in serialized form in the pages of Argosy All-Story Weekly (1922-1923) and follows the adventures that took place in Tarzan the Terrible,
dealing with the rescue of Jane and Tarzan’s discovery of lost valley
of Pal-ul-don. Tarzan shares the title of this book with Jad-bal-ja,
which means "The Golden Lion" in the language of Pal-ul-don, and this
character becomes one of the more beloved additions to the series. The
lions of Africa had always been one of Tarzan’s greater animal enemies,
he'd certainly killed enough of them, but in Tarzan the Untamed
he managed to tame and befriend not one but two of the noble beasts, so
it’s not to farfetched that Tarzan would again ally himself with Numa,
the king of the jungle.
The book begins with Tarzan, Jane, and
Korak returning from Pal-ul-don when they come across a lion cub whose
parents had been killed, and much to Korak and Jane’s shock the Ape Man
adopts the little guy. He begins an intensive training routine with the
little lion, and as it grows it learns how to attack man by going for
the throat (Tarzan ties meat to the neck of man-shaped dummies), fetch a
victim without killing him, and to stealthily move through the jungle
as only one trained by Tarzan can. Things do seem idyllic for a while,
the Waziri had rebuilt the destroyed Greystoke Estate, but much of
Tarzan and Jane’s money was given to the war effort and thus Tarzan
decides another trip to the vaults of Opar is necessary. Jane is against
this, as nothing but trouble has ever come from his ventures to the
lost outpost of Atlantis, but Tarzan pooh-poohs her fears and heads out
with fifty Waziri warriors to retrieve the gold. Jane is left at home
with Korak and Jad-bal-ja. Needless to say Jane was right to be worried.
Tarzan and the Golden Lion
has two plots that are only loosely connected by Tarzan’s involvement
in them, and to be perfectly frank he doesn't really have much an
involvement in the second one. The first plot has to do with Tarzan’s
trip to Opar to get the gold to replenish the Greystoke coffers. Since
his last encounter with the lost outpost of Atlantis things haven’t been
going so well for the High Priestess La, her history of letting Tarzan
escape the sacrificial knife of the Sun God has angered many of her
people, and none more so than High Priest Cadji. This villainous priest
does not want to share power with a woman, he is constantly working to
stage a coup, and when Tarzan once again falls into the clutches of the
Oparians this adds the perfect fuel for La’s overthrowing. Cadji tries
to frame La in plot to free Tarzan, which would lead to her being
overthrown, but instead of falling for Cadji’s schemes La decides to
basically say “Screw it” to the job of High Priestess, and not
only does she help Tarzan escape but she goes with him. This leads to a
slight complication when the only safe way out of Opar is through a
passageway that leads to a lost valley (people in Africa apparently have
a terrible time keeping track of their valleys), and a land populated
with natives that seem to have ape-like characteristics of an even lower
evolutionary scale than the Waz-don and Ho-don of Pal-ul-don. These
natives are ruled over by a cruel race of intelligent gorillas that
enslave these poor blacks, selecting women and children from each
village to be slaves, and marching many of them to their deaths in the Palace of Diamonds before their Emperor, Numa.
The
other plot introduces one of my least favorite characters in the
series, Esteban Miranda, a Spanish-born silent film actor and Tarzan
look-alike. Burroughs had already done a look-a-like story with his book
The Mad King,
which is one of my favorite books of his, but the character of Esteban
Miranda is just so bland and unlikable that every time the stories
shifts away from Tarzan and the High Priestess La to this idiot
character I outwardly groan. Worse is that this carbon copy Tarzan
survives this adventure and makes an appearance in the following book Tarzan and the Ant Men. "Oh, the humanity!"
In
this book he is hired by Flora Hawkes, a former maid of the Greystokes,
to help steal gold from the vaults of Opar. The timing of their theft
and Tarzan’s trip to Opar is one of Burroughs standard “What a coincidence!”
plot elements. I’m not overly a fan of this element, as its bad enough
that Burroughs has people constantly running into each other, as if
Africa is smaller than Adventureland at Disney World, without making the
issue even more contrived. The need for a Tarzan imposter is pretty
thin and the mission only really requires it for plot convenience. That
the Great Apes, the Waziri, and even briefly Jane, are fooled by this
imposter has always irked me.
The parts of this book that dealt
with Tarzan helping to overthrow the Palace of Diamonds is great pulpy
adventurous stuff, Tarzan is allowed to kick some serious ass, and when
we first learn that these people worship an actual lion as emperor we
immediately know that Jad-bal-ja is going to show up and make things
really interesting. If ever you want to overthrow a civilization Tarzan
is your man as in these books he could be almost be called Mister
Revolution. The amount of cities and lost civilization Tarzan helps
overthrow is staggering, which makes his stopping a coup d'état in
Opar kind of ironic. This amazing stuff, and what we want in our Tarzan
stories, and this is what makes cutting back to the French Farce of
everyone thinking lunkhead Miranda is Tarzan so off-putting. I just
didn’t care. Give me more of Tarzan and his Golden Lion taking on hordes
of diamond encrusted gorillas, not a group of idiot thieves bickering
amongst themselves.
Idiot look-alike plot aside Tarzan and the Golden Lion
is still a fun read, Jane continues to grow as a character as she
becomes less and less the damsel in distress. The addition of Jad-bal-ja
is certainly a bonus to the Tarzan cast of characters, and it’s nice to
see that Korak is still hanging around. Though we aren’t told what the
hell his wife Meriem is up to while her husband is traipsing all over
Africa. This ninth installment in the world of Tarzan may be a little
uneven but still worth the read
Saturday, May 14, 2016
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