The Tarzan Duology of Edgar Rice Burroughs
Tarzan of the Apes and The Return of Tarzan: A Pulp-Lit Annotated Edition
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Narrated by:
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Finn J.D. John
About this listen
In the wild, unexplored coastal jungles of West Africa lives a wild human boy named Tarzan, the adopted son of a tribe of fierce almost-human anthropoid apes - but in reality, the unknown heir of a wealthy and titled English noble family. Then one day, a small party of American treasure-seekers is marooned on Tarzan's beach, including a lovely Baltimore belle named Jane Porter. When she leaves, Tarzan quits his jungle life and learns the ways of civilized man, so that he can follow her. But after he arrives, he finds he must choose between his noble birthright and her future happiness....
The two books in this duology were the world's introduction to Tarzan - possibly the most widely recognized character in fiction. Over the century, since he was introduced to us, he has starred in hundreds of books, comics, and films, and thousands of derivative bits of pop culture such as bubblegum cards and lunch pails. Only Bram Stoker's Dracula has starred in more movies. Yet the Tarzan most people think they know is far different from the original Tarzan - the Tarzan you'll meet in this audiobook. The Tarzan most of us know is a crude, powerful, primitive man who speaks in monosyllables ('Me Tarzan. You Jane. Where boy?') . The original Tarzan was altogether different - fluent in at least four languages (Ape, French, English, and Arabic, in that order) and equally comfortable in the smoking room of a great ocean liner as he was in the savage jungle.
This pulp-lit annotated edition of Burroughs' first two Tarzan books tells the story of the ape-man's origins, from his childhood adventures to his triumphant arrival as Lord Greystoke.
©2015 Finn J.D. John (P)2015 Pulp-Lit ProductionsWhat listeners say about The Tarzan Duology of Edgar Rice Burroughs
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- 20-11-2016
Great Classic
The first book was everything you thought it would be. I was stunned at the ending. I had to know more!
The narrator does a good job except you could say he does a female voice too well in the fact he successfully portrayed them as the air heads they were expected to be. There is a good time commentary at the end of the Duology that expresses the reasons why Edgar wrote what he did and how it came about portrayed the way it was. That goes for roughly 8/10mins. It is a wonderful book and the only Tarzan movie to come close is the 2016 Legend of Tarzan. Though that still underplays Tarzan's true dominating character. Well worth the price.
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