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Search tags: john-carter-of-mars
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review 2015-07-21 18:19
John Carter of Mars (Barsoom, #1-3) - Mike Ashley,Edgar Rice Burroughs,Tom Yeates

I read this book a chapter at time over a few months, which I think is a good way to consume this book as the writing is basically of the form "...and then this happened...and then this other thing happened..", which for me can become tiresome. It is written from the point of view of the main character and well, there is no other way to say it, he is kinda full of himself and brags a lot. Anyway I did enjoy these three books, but my favorite was the Gods of Mars, I just really liked the mythology presented in the story.

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review 2013-07-01 00:00
John Carter - A Princess of Mars - Roger Langridge I will have to say that this is one of the few books that I liked the movie adaption more than the actual book. The book was still enjoyable but Disney’s interpretation I think was even better than the book. The writing style took a little time to get used to but once I was enthralled in the story it started feeling natural. Fun read with enough differences from the movie which I saw first to keep it interesting.
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review 2012-11-12 00:00
The Gods of Mars - Edgar Rice Burroughs
3.5 Stars

This second novel in the John Carter series is every much as classic as the first novel. I admit that with some classic series I only rank the first as a classic. Take [b:The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy|11|The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy (Hitchhiker's Guide, #1)|Douglas Adams|http://d.gr-assets.com/books/1327656754s/11.jpg|3078186] series. I think the first book is a classic of sci-fi, comedy and literature in general, however while I do enjoy the next few books I don't think they are classics since they are very similar in humour and plot. However this novel branches out from [b:A Princess of Mars|40395|A Princess of Mars (Barsoom, #1)|Edgar Rice Burroughs|http://d.gr-assets.com/books/1332272118s/40395.jpg|1129624] and exhibits the fuller and larger world of Barsoom.

Another reminder about my rating is that I rate within genres. So while this may be a classic science fiction novel and a classic in general I don't think that it's as strong a novel as [b:A Princess of Mars|40395|A Princess of Mars (Barsoom, #1)|Edgar Rice Burroughs|http://d.gr-assets.com/books/1332272118s/40395.jpg|1129624]. That said is The Gods of Mars a good book? It is definitely a good book worth reading, albeit one with what look like technical flaws.

The one thing that seemed more noticeable in this novel was that with John Carter now an expert of life on Barsoom he was a rather unreliable narrator, referring often to just how much better he was than anyone else on the planet. The term that many people would use for that is that John Carter is a 'Mary Sue'. However I think that the aim was to make him more like a superhero, a larger than life warrior who can do many impossible things. At the same time John Carter still fails at times and is often overpowered by his enemies in this book. Another more noticeable thing was that Burroughs used deus-ex-machina to fill in plot holes from time to time.

That said Burroughs, as with many writers from his older time periods, possesses a greater clarity and beauty in his vocabulary and word selection than most modern authors. His word choice has that archaic beauty that makes it at times dated for today's readers but also unique and powerful for anyone who loves language.

As for other reasons that I feel that this is a classic?
1) It has stood the test of time and is still being read by readers almost a century after being written
2) It is a key novel in the genre of science fiction having influenced modern films like Star Wars and Avatar, creating the form of science fiction which is involved with space travel on other planets, aliens and the merging of fantasy and science fiction ideas
3) There is an interesting look at hierarchies and religion as well as being an entertaining novel
4) It builds on the first novel, helping to create a mythology for much other science fiction as well as Barsoom

On the whole an entertaining novel, reasonably well written for being nearly 100 years old and I will be looking to read more in the series at some point as a completist type reader. I almost forgot to add that this book is also a book to be read as 'literary pulp'!
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review 2012-04-01 00:00
A Princess of Mars (Barsoom, #1)
A Princess of Mars - Edgar Rice Burroughs,John Seelye

Like most people, it seems, I saw the trailers for Andrew Stanton’s John Carter adaptation and thought it looked stupid. And this is coming from a person who LOVES science fiction, especially of the pulpy kind (more often than not, the stupider it is, the more I love it), and who knew the history and importance of the John Carter name in relation to all kinds of sci-fi since its initial publication. The dismissal of this film has been written about by many people in the last couple of months, but the consensus seems to be that the marketing campaign for the film was completely botched, and that because the marketing failed to capitalize on the movie’s strengths and legacies, it thus failed to appeal to the very people who would have loved it, had their butts been in those seats during the opening two weeks. Because of this, John Carter* seems doomed to go down as one of the biggest box office bombs of all time. Which is a shame, because after reading that Vulture article I linked to above, I was consumed with curiosity about the film and went out to see it the very next day. No surprise, I loved it.

 

*As an aside, I can’t help but feel that it is extremely stupid that they cut the title from the originally proposed John Carter of Mars (although the film actually ends by adding the words “of Mars” to the title) to simply John Carter. I read somewhere that they were trying to avoid comparisons to the box office bomb Mars Needs Moms, but this is obviously a move both ironic and stupid, as I’m sure it led many people to wonder why they would ever care about that doctor guy from ER jumping around in some desert.

 

Extremely long story short, my love of the film (which was cheesy and romantic and spectacular in all the best ways) influenced me to finally seek out the source material, which had been on my radar for quite some time as one of the foundational texts of pulp and fantastical sci-fi. There are eleven novels in Edgar Rice Burrough’s Barsoom books (the first three of which were adapted by Stanton for the film), and the first of these is A Princess of Mars. A Princess of Mars chronicles John Carter’s first year on Mars: how he came to be there in the first place; his capture by the green men of Mars, a warrior race called Tharks; the exceptional physical abilities given to him by the light Martian gravity; his romance with the titular Martian princess Dejah Thoris; and his ultimate acceptance into the culture and lifestyle of Mars, which becomes his home. The novel is actually framed as a manuscript given to “the author” by his uncle, who proclaims his story to be true.

 

It was a bit strange going from the film to the text, as one of the things Stanton did was update the story a bit for modern audiences (clarifying some of the science, as it was almost a hundred years out of date, modifying problematic racial constructs, and editing a bit here and there for story and content), and weirdly, I like the film’s version* better. The novel does that weird first person POV thing that older novels sometimes do where the narrator tells exactly what happened in an almost clinical detail (sort of like a travelogue), and poetical images and character moments are somewhat rare. (It reminds me very strongly of the writing of H. Rider Haggard, a Victorian adventure writer who set most of his stories in Africa.) Some parts were pretty wacky in terms of Burroughs’ understanding of science, but overall I was surprised at how well most of it has held up. The power of Burroughs’ story (and imagination) makes it easy to overlook most of its faults.

 

*I will be honest with you here and admit that a large part of this bias PROBABLY has to do with the fact that I am now completely in love with Taylor Kitsch and think he is gorgeous and wonderful to look at and I want my DNA to be with his DNA forever.

 

I’m rating this 3.5 stars for now, mostly because it took me so long to get through. The beginning is gripping, and once Dejah Thoris comes into play some good character and action stuff starts happening, and then it kind of rockets until the end. The first 1/3 of the novel, however, is mostly concentrated on giving Carter’s anthropological observations about Thark culture, which is kind of interesting, but extremely less so than other things that I can think of (I think Burroughs wasted some opportunity here to really make Carter a sympathetic character by not playing up the fish out of water aspect enough — this is something the film does very well). I also think I had a hard time with it because I was reading it on the Kindle app on my phone, and e-books are REALLY not my thing. I like paper, the way it smells and feels, and the way that the physicality of actual printed books helps me connect to the story. It was hard for me to motivate myself to pick up my phone to finish reading when I have so many lovely printed books at my disposal, and I’m sure reading it so protractedly like that didn’t help my enjoyment of the actual story.

 

Anyway, moral of the story: John Carter is a good movie. Please rent it when it comes out on DVD.

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review 2012-03-31 00:00
A Princess of Mars: John Carter of Mars, Book 1
A Princess of Mars (John Carter of Mars, #1) - Edgar Rice Burroughs I probably read this at the wrong age. It's a (very) old-fashioned SciFi romp. I should have read it at 12/13 and probably would have thought a) it was great and b) I was very grown-up and sophisticated for seeing past the slightly archaic language and attitudes.At 45 it still seems like an ok read but a bit creaky.
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