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Books with title Tarzan The Untamed

  • Tarzan The Untamed

    Edgar Rice Burroughs

    Paperback (CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform, Aug. 4, 2017)
    This book is one of the classic book of all time.
  • Tarzan the Untamed

    Edgar Rice Burroughs

    Paperback (Independently published, May 5, 2020)
    Tarzan the Untamed is a book by American writer Edgar Rice Burroughs, the seventh in his series of twenty-four books about the title character Tarzan.
  • Tarzan the Untamed

    Edgar Rice Burroughs

    Hardcover (Grosset & Dunlap, Jan. 1, 1920)
    n/a
  • Tarzan the Untamed

    Edgar Rice Burroughs

    Paperback (CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform, Jan. 8, 2013)
    Tarzan the Untamed is a book written by Edgar Rice Burroughs, the seventh in his series of books about the title character Tarzan. The action is set during World War I. While John Clayton, Lord Greystoke (Tarzan) is away from his plantation home in British East Africa, it is destroyed by invading German troops from Tanganyika. On his return he discovers among many burned bodies one that appears to be the corpse of his wife, Jane Porter Clayton. Another fatality is the Waziri warrior Wasimbu, left crucified by the Germans. (Wasimbu's father Muviro, first mentioned in this story, goes on to play a prominent role in later Tarzan novels.)
  • Tarzan the Untamed

    Edgar Rice Burroughs

    Paperback (Independently published, Oct. 21, 2018)
    Complete and unabridged paperback edition. The action is set during World War I. While John Clayton, Lord Greystoke (Tarzan) is away from his plantation home in British East Africa, it is destroyed by invading German troops from Tanganyika. On his return he discovers among many burned bodies one that appears to be the corpse of his wife, Jane Porter Clayton. Another fatality is the Waziri warrior Wasimbu, left crucified by the Germans. (Wasimbu's father Muviro, first mentioned in this story, goes on to play a prominent role in later Tarzan novels.) From Wikipedia.
  • The Untamed

    Max Brand

    Paperback (Phoenix Rider, Oct. 3, 2008)
    Please visit www.PhoenixRider for more great westerns at great prices. Max Brand and Zane Grey novels stsrting from just $3.99.
  • Tam the untamed

    Mary E Patchett

    Hardcover (Bobbs-Merrill, March 15, 1955)
    None
  • Tarzan the Untamed

    Edgar Rice Burroughs, Patrick Girard Lawlor

    MP3 CD (Blackstone Audiobooks, March 1, 2006)
    Here is the continuing adventure of one of fiction's most dramatic heroes, Tarzan the ape-man. In this new episode, Tarzan has given up his jungle ways and is living contentedly on a farm with his beloved wife, Jane, as a wealthy member of British nobility. But when he returns one day from a trip to Nairobi, he finds his farm has been laid to waste by German troops--with no one left alive. In grief and rage, he casts off the veneer of civilization to become once again the primitive ape-man, ranging the country in search of those who killed his mate to mete out the vengeance of the jungle. Never has master storyteller Edgar Rice Burroughs so skillfully shown the struggles within the breast of his ape-man hero who, through dozens of adventures and hair-breadth escapes, tracks down his enemies and triumphs in a crashing, action-packed climax.
  • Tarzan the Untamed

    Edgar Rice Burroughs

    Paperback (CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform, April 17, 2014)
    Hauptmann Fritz Schneider trudged wearily through the somber aisles of the dark forest. Sweat rolled down his bullet head and stood upon his heavy jowls and bull neck. His lieutenant marched beside him while Underlieutenant von Goss brought up the rear, following with a handful of askaris the tired and all but exhausted porters whom the black soldiers, following the example of their white officer, encouraged with the sharp points of bayonets and the metal-shod butts of rifles. There were no porters within reach of Hauptmann Schneider so he vented his Prussian spleen upon the askaris nearest at hand, yet with greater circumspection since these men bore loaded rifles—and the three white men were alone with them in the heart of Africa. Ahead of the hauptmann marched half his company, behind him the other half—thus were the dangers of the savage jungle minimized for the German captain. At the forefront of the column staggered two naked savages fastened to each other by a neck chain. These were the native guides impressed into the service of Kultur and upon their poor, bruised bodies Kultur's brand was revealed in divers cruel wounds and bruises. Thus even in darkest Africa was the light of German civilization commencing to reflect itself upon the undeserving natives just as at the same period, the fall of 1914, it was shedding its glorious effulgence upon benighted Belgium. It is true that the guides had led the party astray; but this is the way of most African guides. Nor did it matter that ignorance rather than evil intent had been the cause of their failure. It was enough for Hauptmann Fritz Schneider to know that he was lost in the African wilderness and that he had at hand human beings less powerful than he who could be made to suffer by torture. That he did not kill them outright was partially due to a faint hope that they might eventually prove the means of extricating him from his difficulties and partially that so long as they lived they might still be made to suffer.
  • Tarzan the Untamed

    Edgar Rice Burroughs

    Mass Market Paperback (Ballantine, Jan. 1, 1972)
    Vintage paperback
  • Tarzan the Untamed

    Edgar Rice Burroughs

    Hardcover (Grosset & Dunlap, Publishers [1948], Jan. 1, 1948)
    None
  • Tarzan the Untamed

    Edgar Rice Burroughs

    Hardcover (Cosimo Classics, July 1, 2008)
    Edgar Rice Burroughs created one of the most iconic figures in American pop culture, Tarzan of the Apes, and it is impossible to overstate his influence on entire genres of popular literature in the decades after his enormously winning pulp novels stormed the public's imagination. Tarzan the Untamed, first published in 1920, is the seventh book of Burroughs' tales of the ape-man. Here, Tarzan swears vengeance against the murderers of his wife as the conflagration of the Great War begins to burn a swathe through this corner of British East Africa. American novelist EDGAR RICE BURROUGHS (1875-1950) wrote dozens of adventure, crime, and science fiction novels that are still beloved today, including Tarzan of the Apes (1912), At the Earth's Core (1914), A Princess of Mars (1917), The Land That Time Forgot (1924), and Pirates of Venus (1934). He is reputed to have been reading a comic book when he died.