Tarzan of the Apes is Edgar Rice Burroughs' first novel in the series starring the man raised by apes. John Clayton is born in the coastal jungles of equatorial Africa to a marooned couple from England, John and Alice Clayton, the Lord and Lady of...
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Tarzan of the Apes is Edgar Rice Burroughs' first novel in the series starring the man raised by apes. John Clayton is born in the coastal jungles of equatorial Africa to a marooned couple from England, John and Alice Clayton, the Lord and Lady of Greystoke. But after his parents die, the infant Clayton is adopted by she-ape Kala. Raised without awareness of his human heritage, he is named Tarzan, meaning "White Skin" in the language of the apes
Title; Contents; Chapter 1 Out to Sea; Chapter 2 The Savage Home; Chapter 3 Life and Death; Chapter 4 The Apes; Chapter 5 The White Ape; Chapter 6 Jungle Battles; Chapter 7 The Light of Knowledge; Chapter 8 The Tree-top Hunter; Chapter 9 Man and Man; Chapter 10 The Fear-Phantom; Chapter 11 "King of the Apes"; Chapter 12 Man's Reason; Chapter 13 His Own Kind; Chapter 14 At the Mercy of the Jungle; Chapter 15 The Forest God; Chapter 16 "Most Remarkable"; Chapter 17 Burials; Chapter 18 The Jungle Toll; Chapter 19 The Call of the Primitive; Chapter 20 Heredity; Chapter 21 The Village of Torture
Chapter 22 The Search PartyChapter 23 Brother Men.; Chapter 24 Lost Treasure; Chapter 25 The Outpost of the World; Chapter 26 The Height of Civilization; Chapter 27 The Giant Again; Chapter 28 Conclusion;
The Return of Tarzan is Edgar Rice Burroughs' third novel in the series starring the man raised by apes. First serialized in 1914 in All-Story Cavalier magazine, it was published as a novel in 1916. After marrying Jane at the end of The Return of...
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The Return of Tarzan is Edgar Rice Burroughs' third novel in the series starring the man raised by apes. First serialized in 1914 in All-Story Cavalier magazine, it was published as a novel in 1916. After marrying Jane at the end of The Return of Tarzan , and claiming his birthright as Lord of Greystoke, our former ape-man finds his infant son has been kidnapped in London by old enemies. Following an anonymous call, Tarzan falls into his enemies' trap and finds himself
Title; Contents; Chapter 1 Kidnapped; Chapter 2 Marooned; Chapter 3 Beasts at Bay; Chapter 4 Sheeta; Chapter 5 Mugambi; Chapter 6 A Hideous Crew; Chapter 7 Betrayed; Chapter 8 The Dance of Death; Chapter 9 Chivalry or Villainy; Chapter 10 The Swede; Chapter 11 Tambudza; Chapter 12 A Black Scoundrel; Chapter 13 Escape; Chapter 14 Alone in the Jungle; Chapter 15 Down the Ugambi; Chapter 16 In the Darkness of the Night; Chapter 17 On the Deck of the "Kincaid"; Chapter 18 Paulvitch Plots Revenge; Chapter 19 The Last of the "Kincaid"; Chapter 20 Jungle Island Again
The Gods of Mars is the second novel in Burroughs' Barsoom series. The setting is an inhabited, dying Mars, where the different races fight over dwindling resources. It is a frontier world full of honor, glory and desperation; lost cities and ancient...
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The Gods of Mars is the second novel in Burroughs' Barsoom series. The setting is an inhabited, dying Mars, where the different races fight over dwindling resources. It is a frontier world full of honor, glory and desperation; lost cities and ancient secrets provide the landscape for heroic adventures
Title; Contents; Foreword; Chapter I - The Plant Men; Chapter II - A Forest Battle; Chapter III - The Chamber of Mystery; Chapter IV - Thuvia; Chapter V - Corridors of Peril; Chapter VI - The Black Pirates of Barsoom; Chapter VII - A Fair Goddess; Chapter VIII - The Depths of Omean; Chapter IX - Issus, Goddess of Life Eternal; Chapter X - The Prison Isle of Shador; Chapter XI - When Hell Broke Loose; Chapter XII - Doomed to Die; Chapter XIII - A Break for Liberty; Chapter XIV - The Eyes in the Dark; Chapter XV - Flight and Pursuit; Chapter XVI - Under Arrest; Chapter XVII - The Death Sentence
Chapter XVIII - Sola's StoryChapter XIX - Black Despair; Chapter XX - The Air Battle; Chapter XXI - Through Flood and Flame; Chapter XXII - Victory and Defeat; Endnotes;