Edgar Rice
Burroughs genre milestone A Princess of Mars ended with the hero appropriately back on Earth where he’d begun his
tale. One plot line was left unresolved,
but had the book not sold as well as it did, the reader could have walked away
satisfied the circle was completed. But
with Dejah Thoris trapped in the First Born’s Temple of the Sun, a Martian year
to go before she is to see the light of day again, the ending of The Gods of Mars is anything but
complete. With the red carpet laid out
for a third installment, The Warlord of
Mars follows upon The Gods of Mars, but, brings the tale of
John Carter to a close, no loose ends.
And
indeed, with Dejah Thoris trapped, it is up to her beloved John Carter to
rescue her (for the millionth time) from the jaws of death. Trailing a Thern and First Born into an
underground cavern in the opening chapter, he learns of a secret entrance into
the Temple of the Sun. But worse yet, he
learns the pair plot to kill Dejah Thoris before her allotted year is up. Spurned to action with the ever-faithful
Woola at his side, John Carter embarks on yet another rescue attempt (rolls
eyes). An extended chase that takes
Carter to the North Pole, every color of man on Barsoom—red, black, white,
yellow, and green—is eventually drawn into the plight. Battles on ice, secret entrances,
double-bluffs, new alliances, enemies turned friends—all of Barsoom intersects
for the massive conclusion of the John Carter epic.
Burroughs
seemingly aware of the pitfalls of serial pulp, The Warlord of Mars accomplishes two important things. The first is keep the pulp fresh by opening
up further bits of the Barsoom map and the cultures that live there. The Yellow Men prove every bit as helpful and
devious as the black, white, green, and red, as well as owners of strange
beasts. They also prove holders of
technology not yet witnessed by Carter on the red planet. The second is to finally, once and for all,
put an end to the endless chase/capture/escape formula. The ending of The Warlord of Mars is definitive. Just as the reader groans “I can’t take any more threats on Dejah Thoris life! I can’t take any more maudlin trash from
Carter as he chases her captors! Somebody kill the superlative spewing machines
Burroughs has become!!”, it all comes to an end—a syrupy, mawkish Hollywood
end that befits the syrupy, mawkish Hollywood story that preceded it.
In the
end, if the reader has not bailed thus far in Carter’s tale, they will not
reading The Warlord of Mars. For as cheesy as everything (and I mean
everything) is in the series, Burroughs is at least consistent in his
cheesiness. Sensationalized to the nth degree, he once again puts his flair
for storytelling to use via endless action and adventure. Capitalizing on the hero’s journey, the only
question left unanswered is: how did Carter’s narrative make its way back to
Earth for Burroughs to read?
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