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Books with title The Mad King Burroughs, Edgar Rice

  • Edgar Rice Burroughs: The Cave Girl

    E. R. Burroughs, Edgar Rice Burroughs

    Paperback (CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform, Aug. 19, 2016)
    Blueblooded mama's boy Waldo Emerson Smith-Jones is swept overboard during a south seas voyage for his lifelong ill health. He finds himself on a jungle island. His bookish education has not prepared him to cope with these surroundings, and he is a coward. He is terrified when he encounters primitive, violent men, ape-like throwbacks in mankind's evolutionary history.
  • Edgar Rice Burroughs' Tarzan

    Gina Ingoglia Weiner, Edgar Rice Burroughs, Mel Crawford

    Hardcover (Golden Press, March 15, 1964)
    (Hardcover - 1964) 8oz. Author: Gina Ingoglia Weiner, Publisher: Golden Press, Edition: -A- 1st Edition 1964, Size: 8"x6.75"x0.25", Subject: Stories For Children, Title: Edgar Rice Burroughs' Tarzan (A Little Golden Book)
  • THE MUCKER by Edgar Rice Burroughs

    Edgar Rice Burroughs, Books In Motion, Gene Engene

    Audio CD (Books In Motion, July 6, 2017)
    Billy Byrne is a low class American born in Chicago's ghetto. He grows up a thief and a mugger. "Billy was a mucker, a hoodlum, a gangster, a thug, a tough." He is not chivalrous nor kind, and has only meager ethics - never giving evidence against a friend or leaving someone behind. He chooses a life of robbery and violence, disrespecting those who work for a living. He has a deep hatred for wealthy society. He trains as a prizefighter but cannot stop drinking. When falsely accused of murder, he flees to San Francisco and is shanghaied aboard a ship. Ironically, enforced sobriety, brutal ship's discipline and productive work improved him. The ship's secret mission is soon enacted - the hijacking of a specific yacht to take a millionaire's daughter, Barbara Harding, for ransom. Billy Byrne brutally beats her suitor, Billy Mallory, leaving him for dead. "He knew that she looked down upon him as an inferior being. She was of the class that addressed those in his walk of life as 'my man.'" After Barbara confronts him and calls him a coward, a change begins in Billy Byrne. He saves the life of one kidnapper, Theriere, rather than letting him be washed overboard, though he cannot fathom his own reasons. After a terrible storm, the ship is damaged and only makes it to land with Billy's help at the wheel. He rescues Barbara from the wreck and brings her ashore. Barbara is kidnapped by headhunters descended from medieval Japanese. Byrne and Theriere race to rescue her from the daimyo's hut in the middle of the village, but Theriere is fatally wounded in the escape.
  • The Mad King by Edgar Rice Burroughs, Fiction, Fantasy

    Edgar Rice Burroughs, Amy Sterling Casil

    Hardcover (Borgo Press, Feb. 1, 2003)
    Edgar Rice Burroughs wrote this tale of confused identity and royal intrigue in 1914 and 1915, as World War I was getting ready to happen: it means to be an homage to Anthony Hope's Prisoner of Zenda. But, of course, it isn't Hope writing, but Burroughs: the events that led to the war inform the book, and it speaks to the real events happening as Burroughs wrote. That makes it a very different story from Hope's almost-whimsical novel. Part of the reason Burroughs left such a lasting mark on the world is because he was engaged in the events that surrounded him; the news troubled him deeply and personally. As well it might! He was writing, as he always did, on fantastical topics; but it is the fantastic nature of the twentieth century that is the real text of the man's career.
  • The Mad King by Edgar Rice Burroughs, Fiction, Fantasy

    Edgar Rice Burroughs

    Paperback (Wildside Press, Aug. 1, 2003)
    Edgar Rice Burroughs wrote this tale of confused identity and royal intrigue in 1914 and 1915, as World War I was getting ready to happen: it means to be an homage to Anthony Hope's PRISONER OF ZENDA. But, of course, it isn't Hope writing, but Burroughs: the events that led to the war inform the book, and it speaks to the real events happening as Burroughs wrote. That makes it a very different story from Hope's almost-whimsical novel. Part of the reason Burroughs left such a lasting mark on the world is because he was engaged in the events that surrounded him; the news troubled him deeply and personally. As well it might! He was writing, as he always did, on fantastical topics; but it is the fantastic nature of the twentieth century that is the real text of the man's career.
  • The Mad King: Edgar Rice Burroughs

    Edgar Rice Burroughs

    The Mad King is a Ruritanian romance by American writer Edgar Rice BurroughsSet in the fictional European kingdom of Lutha, the protagonist is a young American named Barney Custer, of Beatrice, Nebraska, who is the son of an American farmer and a runaway Luthan princess, Victoria Rubinroth. Unaware of his royal blood, much less that he is a dead ringer for his relative Leopold, the current king of Lutha, Barney visits Lutha on the eve of the First World War to see for himself his mother's native land. As he arrives in Lutha, King Leopold has just escaped from his ten years' imprisonment at the hands of his scheming uncle, Prince Peter of Blentz. Much to his own and everyone else's confusion, Barney is naturally mistaken for the king, leading to numerous complications...
  • The Gods of Mars by Edgar Rice Burroughs

    Edgar Rice Burroughs

    Paperback (CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform, Oct. 24, 2017)
    The Gods of Mars by Edgar Rice Burroughs
  • By Edgar Rice Burroughs - The Gods of Mars

    Edgar Rice Burroughs

    Audio CD (Tantor Audio, Feb. 16, 2001)
    None
  • Edgar Rice Burroughs - The Cave Girl

    Edgar Rice Burroughs

    Paperback (Horse's Mouth, Feb. 2, 2017)
    Edgar Rice Burroughs was born on September 1, 1875, in Chicago, Illinois. His early career was unremarkable. After failing to enter West Point he enlisted in the 7th Calvary but was discharged after heart problems were diagnosed. A series of short term jobs gave no indication as to a career path but finally, in 1911, married and with two young children, he turned his hand to writing. He aimed his works squarely at the very popular pulp serial magazines. His first effort ‘Under The Moons Of Mars’ ran in Munsey’s Magazine in 1912 under the pseudonym Norman Bean. With its success he began writing full time. A continuing theme of his work was to develop series so that each character had ample opportunities to return in sequels. John Carter was in the Mars series and there was another on Venus and one on Pellucidar among others. But perhaps the best known is Tarzan. Indeed Burroughs wanted so much to capitalise upon the brand that he introduced a syndicated Tarzan comic strip, movies and merchandise. He purchased a large ranch north of Los Angeles, California, which he named "Tarzana." The surrounding communities outside the ranch voted in 1927 to adopt the name as their own. By 1932 Burroughs set up his own company to print his own books. Here we publish the second in the Barsoom series and its enduring hero John Carter ‘The Gods of Mars’. Another cultural classic.
  • The Moon Maid by Edgar Rice Burroughs

    Edgar Rice Burroughs

    Paperback (Waking Lion Press (30 July 2008), March 15, 1702)
    None
  • Edgar Rice Burroughs' Tarzan

    Gina Ingoglia Weiner, Mel (illustrator) Crawford

    Hardcover (Golden Press, Jan. 1, 1964)
    None
  • The Gods of Mars BY Burroughs, Edgar Rice

    Edgar Rice Burroughs

    Hardcover (Wildside Press 2007, )
    [ The Gods of Mars BY Burroughs, Edgar Rice ( Author ) ] { Hardcover } 2007