Books Everyone Should Read – Part 7

Regular readers of this blog will recall that I have a deep fondness for the novels of Edgar Rice Burroughs. The Mars (or Barsoom) series is fantastic in both senses of that word. The beginning of the series and Burrough’s first novel, is A Princess of Mars. First published in 1911, it truly is a classic of science-fiction/fantasy adventure. You can pick it up at Feedbooks.com (Click Here) in a variety of eBook formats. It is also available at Manybooks.net and other perveyors of free eBooks. Read it, you’ll be glad you did.

Books Everyone Should Read – Part 3

Tarzan of the Apes by Edgar Rice Burroughs

One of the most underrated books of all time, this is a great adventure, a great love story, and a brilliant story. Get it for free in a variety of eBook formats here. This link will take you to Feedbooks, but the book is available at Manybooks.net and other perveyors of free books.

Edgar Rice Burroughs

I was sorting through books last night and began looking through the covers of Edgar Rice Burroughs books. I am a huge ERB fan and always will be, but they made me so nostalgic that I almost wept. I spent so many hours of my early life adventuring in Barsoom, Pellucidar, Caprona, Amtor, and the African Jungle! Now I feel so old. Perhaps I’ll read Carson of Venus soon and try to recapture a little bit of my youth.

Cave Girl by Edgar Rice Burroughs

Edgar Rice Burroughs was one of the greatest story-tellers of all time. City of Amathar Press is proud to announce a new edition of the classic Cave Girl, by the creator of Tarzan of the Apes. This high quality trade paperback edition features the complete text of this pulp adventure classic, as well as the sequel Cave Man. For now, it is available only at the City of Amathar storefront.

The Steel Dragon – Tributes

There are a number homages hidden within the text of The Steel Dragon. I think most of them are so well hidden that a reader wouldn’t notice them. Here are some of them.

Percy Shelley’s Ozymandias: I love this poem, so in the third book of the series, I had the characters come across an ancient monument with a very similar inscription.

The Lord of the Rings: There are several little tributes in the story, the most obvious is the title of the third book– The Two Dragons. Besides being obvious, because there are two dragons in the story, it is a tip of the hat to the second volume of The Lord of the Rings– The Two Towers.

Stephen King: I wanted a little Stephen King in my book, so I added him. Most of the characters are not patterened, at least physically, after any particular person. I used Stephen King’s picture as a reference for one character– a wizard.

Honor Harrington: I love the Honor Harrington books by David Weber. I had already created two characters named Hero and Hertzal, so when they needed a sister, Honor seemed a perfect name.

The Princess Bride: I added one word as a tribute to this great movie– Inconceivable!

Hamish Macbeth: This great British show was a source of inspiration for my characters who were police constables. Because of this, I added a little dog, like Wee Jock, to the story. I of course named him Hamish.

Nellie Bly: The girl reporter Nellie Bly is a hero of mine and I used her last name as the last name for my main character. If I write a fourth book in the series, I plan to have a character who is a girl reporter.

Edgar Rice Burroughs: There are dinosoaurs in the story. If that’s not enough, I had a character read a book that was very much like an ERB story.

Sherlock Holmes: There are a string of murders in the book. I set one on a foggy waterfront as a deliberate tribute to A. Conan Doyle’s hero and I gave the inspector a double-billed hat and a pipe.

E. Gary Gygax: I plotted out all three books together as one continuous story. I only added one chapter and that was a dungeon crawl. This was a tribute to the creator of D&D.

William Shakespeare: I have loved the name Hero for a woman ever since I watched Much Ado About Nothing. I had decided I would name a character Hero. The fact that she is a twin is also due to my love of the Bard and his penchant for twins.

Tom Swift: I used the Shopton as the name of the town where some of my characters lived before the story begins. Shopton, NY was the home of Tom Swift.