Small House of Everything

Small House of Everything

Friday, February 12, 2016

FORGOTTEN BOOK: TARZAN AND THE FOREIGN LEGION

Tarzan and the Foreign Legion by Edgar Rice Burroughs (1947)


First off, the book starts off with a note from the author that at the time he decided on novel's setting he was woefully ignorant about Sumatra and the local library in Honolulu had no books on the subject.  (Woeful ignorance about a location had never stopped Burroughs before.)  Nonetheless, Burroughs relied on the knowledge of a humber of persons whom he then thanked.  The important thing -- to me, at least -- was that Burroughs dated the note September 11, 1944, indicating that the book was written during the height of the war in the Pacific even though it was published several years after the war ended.

It also should be noted that Tarzan and the Foreign Legion was the 22nd and last Tarzan  novel published during Burroughs' lifetime.  The jungle swinger had been having adventures since 1912 and was one of the mosr popular characters in world.

So...Sumatra.  Well a jungle is a jungle and Burroughs had used the Africa locale many times as Tarzan fought thee enemy during the first world war.  RAF Colonel John  Clayton was aboard an American B-24 for a reconnaisance and photographic mission over the Japanese-held island when the plane was struck by a Japanese Zero.  The plane's pilot, Captain Jerry (a truly noble name, that) Lucas tries to guide the plane from the anti-aircraft guns along the islands shore.  Knowing they were to crash in the jungle, Jerry orders everyone to parachute off the plane, himself being the last to jump.  Once on the ground, Clayton shucks his clothes, fashions a loincloth from part of his parachute, and takes to the trees in search of survivors.

At least three of the plane's crew have survived:  the nobly-named Jerry, hailing from Oklahoma City, S/Sgt. Joe Bubonovitch, a college-educated zoologist from Brooklyn, and S/Sgt. Tony Rosetti, a poorly educated man from the streets of Chicago.  Bubonovich and Rosetti, besides being fearless fighters and the best of friends, provide the comic relief.  Tarzan leads the crew away from the flaming wreckage to begin a long trek through enemy territory toward the shore where they hope to find a boat and sail to Australia.  Along the way, they rescue Corrie van der Meer, the eightee-year-old daughter of a Dutch planter who had been murdered by the Japanese two years earlier.  Corrie had been hiding from the enemy for two years before Tarzan came along.

Along the way, they encounter a many groups of Japanese soldiers -- each more nasty than the other -- as well as aband of Dutch outlaws who have been terrorizing the natives,  Tarzan fight and kills a tiger, a python, an orangutang, a shark, and Jungle Lord knows what else.  Oh...and he also kills what feels like 93 percent of the Japanese on the island.  There's a complicated love story between the noble-named Jerry and Corrie*, some treacherous natives, some noble natives, and a whole lot of capturing and escaping.  And that's basically the book.  (By the end of the novel, Tarzan's group has contained some Americans, some Dutch, a Chinese, and Indonesian, and the British Jungle Lord, thus the "Foreign Legion.")

By this stage in his career, it appears that Burroughs was merely telephoning it in -- at least as far as Tarzan goes.  ERB was never a great stylist; his strength was in his fast-paced style and his imagination.  His imagination flagged in Tarzan and the Foreign Legion and he satisfied himself with merely moving his players around on a board, encountering and overcoming difficulties as they came.  Villains pop up and are quickly eliminated only to have other villains pop up and be eliminated and so on seemingly ad infinitum.

Several sentences in the book make absolutely no sense to such a degree that they could not be printing errors.

Because of when the book was written, Burroughs' jingoism is at full force.  There are no Japanese in the novel -- only Japs, who are often referred to as monkeymen and as stupid an unintelligent.  Even Tarzan calls the enemy Japs.

Nonetheless, despite the banal plotting and racist imagery, the book moves along quickly and there are enough glimpses of the old Burroughs to make the book readable, although discomforting.

Maybe it would be best for you to skip this one and read some of the earlier Tarzan novels.  This one appears to be for completists only.

14 comments:

  1. Sounds like this one had an influence on Will Murray's Return to Pal-ul-don.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I haven't had the chance to read Murray's book yet, Bill. Something I should correct for sure.

      Delete
    2. I haven't had the chance to read Murray's book yet, Bill. Something I should correct for sure.

      Delete
  2. I read this one years ago and remember liking it because of the way Burroughs poked a little fun at himself. But it's been close to 50 years and I have no idea what I'd think of it now.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Twice in the book a character mistakes Tarzzan for Johnny Weismuller, James.

      Delete
    2. Twice in the book a character mistakes Tarzzan for Johnny Weismuller, James.

      Delete
  3. It's 50 years since I read it too, but a significant detail I recall is a discussion of Tarzan's apparent youthfulness -- and how this was achieved by means of a potion some African witch doctor had given him many years earlier. Burroughs seemed to be verging on the claim that Tarzan enjoyed eternal youth.

    ReplyDelete
  4. It's 50 years since I read it too, but a significant detail I recall is a discussion of Tarzan's apparent youthfulness -- and how this was achieved by means of a potion some African witch doctor had given him many years earlier. Burroughs seemed to be verging on the claim that Tarzan enjoyed eternal youth.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. This may not have made Tarzan immortal but he is going to be in his twenties for a long, long time, David. This book hints that Jane and Tarzan's monkey, at the very least, also took the potion. and if I remember correctly, Fritz Leiber also referred to this elixir in TARZAN AND THE VALLEY OF GOLD.

      Delete
    2. This may not have made Tarzan immortal but he is going to be in his twenties for a long, long time, David. This book hints that Jane and Tarzan's monkey, at the very least, also took the potion. and if I remember correctly, Fritz Leiber also referred to this elixir in TARZAN AND THE VALLEY OF GOLD.

      Delete
  5. I read all the TARZAN novels and remember this one was "weak." The first half dozen books in the series thrilled me as a kid.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. The earlier Tarzans WERE much better, George. Of course my opinions were formed when I was a teenaged fan boy. :-)

      Delete
    2. The earlier Tarzans WERE much better, George. Of course my opinions were formed when I was a teenaged fan boy. :-)

      Delete
  6. At least Jerry wasn't fighting the "Jerries."

    ReplyDelete