Serve yourself, your children with the tools that seed intuitive thinking skills, books that challenge and enrich the imagination. Take them back to the time before the mind-controlling television and electronic games to the origins of the ideas that gave birth to these electronic miracles. - BOOKS that fuel the creative processes of the human imagination. Edgar Rice Burroughs was one such man and author that enriched the minds of many a person.
FOREWARD
Venus at its nearest approach to Earth, is still a little
matter of twenty-six million miles away-barely a
sleeper jump in the vast reaches of infinite space. Hidden
from our sight by its cloak of enveloping clouds,
during all time its surface has been seen by but a
single Earth man-Carson of Venus.
This is the fourth story of the adventures of Carson
of Venus on the Shepherd's Star, as narrated by him
telepathically to Edgar Rice Burroughs at Lanikai on
the island of Oahu. It is a story complete in itself. It is
not necessary even to read this foreword, unless you
happen to be curious to learn how Carson navigated
interplanetary space and something of the strange
lands he has visited, the vast, deserted oceans he has
navigated, the savage beasts he has encountered, the
friends and enemies he has made, and the girl whom
he won over apparently insuperable obstacles.
When Carson of Venus took off from Guadalupe
island off the west coast of Mexico in his giant rocket
ship his intended destination was Mars. For more than
a year his calculations had been checked and rechecked
by some of the ablest scientists and astronomers
in America, and the exact moment of his departure
had been determined, together with the position
and inclination of the mile long track along which the
rocket ship would make its take-off. The resistance of
the Earth's atmosphere had been nicely calculated,
as well as the Earth's pull and that of the other planets
and the Sun. The speed of the rocket ship in our atmosphere
and beyond had been as accurately determined
as was scientifically possible; but one factor
had been overlooked. Incomprehensible as it may
appear, no one had taken into consideration the pull
of the Moon!
Shortly after the take-off, Carson realized that he
was already off his course; and for some time it appeared
likely that he would score a direct hit upon
our satellite. Only the terrific velocity of the rocket
ship and the pull of a great star saved him from this;
and he passed over the Moon by the narrowest of
margins, scarcely five thousand feet above her loftiest
mountains.
After that, for a long month, he realized that he was
in the grip of the Sun's attraction and that he was
doomed. He had long since given up hope, when
Venus loomed far ahead and to his right. He realized
that he was going to cross her orbit and that there was
a chance that she might claim him rather than the Sun.
Yet he was still doomed, for had not Science definitely
proved that Venus was without oxygen and incapable
of supporting such forms of life as exist upon Earth?
Soon Venus seized him, and the rocket ship dove
at terrific speed toward the billowing clouds of her
envelope. Following the same procedure that he had
purposed using in making a landing on Mars, he
loosed batteries of parachutes which partially
checked the speed of the ship; then, adjusting his oxygen
tank and mask, he bailed out.
Landing among the branches of giant trees that
raised their heads five thousand feet above the surface
of the planet, he encountered almost immediately
the first of a long series of adventures which have
filled his life almost continuously since his advent
upon Amtor, as Venus is known to its inhabitants; for
he was pursued and attacked by hideous arboreal
carnivores before he reached the tree city of Kooaad
and became the guest-prisoner of Mintep, the king.
It was here that he saw and loved Duare, the king's
daughter, whose person was sacred and upon whose
face no man other than royalty might look and live.
He was captured by enemies of Mintep and put
upon a ship that was to carry him into slavery in a far
country. He headed a mutiny and became a pirate.
He rescued Duare from abductors, but she still
spurned his love. Again and again he befriended,
protected her, and saved her life; but always she remained
the sacrosanct daughter of a king.
He was captured by the Thorists, but he escaped
the Room of the Seven Doors in the seaport of Kapdor.
He fought with tharbans and hairy savages. He sought
Duare in Kormor, the city of the dead, where reanimated
corpses lived their sad, gruesome lives.
He won renown in Havatoo, the perfect city; and
here he built the first aeroplane that had ever sailed
the Amtorian skies. In it he escaped with Duare after
a miscarriage of justice had doomed her to death.
They came then to the country called Korvan,
where Mephis, the mad dictator, ruled. Here Duare's
father was a prisoner condemned to death. After the
overthrow of Mephis, Duare, believing Carson dead,
flew back to her own country, taking her father with
her. There she was condemned to death because she
had mated with a lesser mortal.
Carson of Venus followed in a small sailing boat,
was captured by pirates, but finally reached Kooaad,
the tree city which is the capital of Mintep's kingdom.
By a ruse, he succeeded in rescuing Duare; and flew
away with her in the only airship on Venus.
What further adventures befell them, Carson of
Venus will tell in his own words through Edgar Rice
Burroughs who is at Lanikai on the island of Oahu.
About the Author
Edgar Rice Burroughs is one of the world's most
popular authors. With no previous experience as an
author, he wrote and sold his first novel--'A Princess
of Mars' in 1912. In the ensuing thirty-eight years until
his death in 1950, Burroughs wrote ninety-one books
and a host of short stories and articles. Although best
known as the creator of the classic Tarzan of the Apes
and John Carter of Mars, his restless imagination knew
few bounds. Burroughs's prolific pen ranged from the
American West to primitive Africa and on to romantic
adventure on the moon, the planets, and even beyond
the farthest star.
No one knows how many copies of ERB books have
been published throughout the world. It is conservative
to say, however, that with the translations into
thirty-two known languages, including Braille, the
number must ran into the hundreds of millions. When
one considers the additional worldwide following of
the Tarzan newspaper feature, radio programs, comic
magazines, motion pictures, and television,
Burroughs must have been known and loved by literally
a thousand million or more.
Edgar Rice Burroughs commenced writing a "contemporary"
tale about adventure in the south seas in
1913. The first part was called THE CAVE GIRL and
originally appeared in THE ALL-STORY magazine for
July, August, and September 1913. Its sequel, THE
CAVE MAN appeared in serial fashion in 1917; both
parts were later collected in hard cover in 1925 by A.
C. McClurg & Co.
Softcover, 5¼" x 8¼", 325+ pages
Perfect-Bound