Tarzan: Return to Pal-ul-don (The Wild Adventures of Tarzan) (Volume 1), by Will Murray
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Tarzan: Return to Pal-ul-don (The Wild Adventures of Tarzan) (Volume 1), by Will Murray
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With the African continent engulfed by World War II, John Clayton, Lord Greystoke, abandons his role as Lord of the Jungle in order to combat the spreading Nazi menace. Flying a P-40 Tomahawk warplane, Clayton is sent on his first mission: to rescue the missing British Military Intelligence officer code-named Ilex. But the daring task plunges him into his savage past after he’s forced down in a lost land that seems hauntingly familiar. When Tarzan of the Apes returns to the prehistoric realm called Pal-ul-don, he must revert to his most savage persona, that of Tarzan-jad-guru––Tarzan the Terrible!
Tarzan: Return to Pal-ul-don (The Wild Adventures of Tarzan) (Volume 1), by Will Murray- Amazon Sales Rank: #401846 in Books
- Published on: 2015-05-30
- Original language: English
- Number of items: 1
- Dimensions: 9.00" h x .88" w x 6.00" l, 1.15 pounds
- Binding: Paperback
- 390 pages
About the Author Will Murray is the author of over 60 adventure novels in series ranging from The Destroyer, Doc Savage, The Executioner and others. His Year 2000 novel, Nick Fury, Agent of SHIELD: Empyre, predicted the terrorist 9/11 attacks while his Doc Savage novels have pitted the Man of Bronze against King Kong and The Shadow.
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Most helpful customer reviews
12 of 13 people found the following review helpful. Giving back a childhood hero... By Stephan Friedt I was a voracious reader as a child. I don’t believe pre-school or kindergarten were offered in the public schools at the time, but my mother took me to the public library twice a week for story times and to gather a huge stack of books for reading at home. Thanks to that exposure, I was reading simple readers when I entered 1st grade and progressed rapidly.Dr. Seuss was quickly joined by Walter Farley, and then H.G. Wells, Stevenson, and a host of classic writers. Among those early influences was Edgar Rice Burroughs. My love for his books led me in later life to discover Kenneth Robeson and Maxwell Grant and RE Howard and Lovecraft and more. But ERB’s books made the most impact on me; the nobility of the characters…the exotic locations…the headlong rush into adventures with confidence. It didn’t hurt the old ego to find out later that his writings were considered to be equal to 2nd and 3rd year college reading levels thanks to his vocabulary and style. ERB’s stories taught me right from wrong, to have confidence in myself, and to appreciate strengths in others regardless of gender…or species.It was depressing to reach the point of having read everything published by ERB or Robeson. The attempts by other writers to carry on the varied characters were few and far between….and always lacking.Then I discovered the writings of William Patrick Murray…or just “Will Murray” as we knew him from the fan publications and small press. I was pleasantly surprised when he took up the mantle of the pulp writers behind the Doc Savage character. His novels had the feel and the “voice” of the original chroniclers like no other.Now he’s cast his lot with the world of E. R. Burroughs with his latest novel “Return to Pal-ul-don”…returning Lord Greystoke to one of the many fantastic worlds within darkest Africa that ERB had concocted…an isolated area of fantastic creatures and even more fantastic humanoids, cut off from the rest of the world by seemingly impenetrable barriers to evolve and exist in its own incredible way.Will Murray has once again captured the “voice” of the original author. Once again the character of Tarzan lives and breathes with the vitality that the original creator instilled within their stories. The attention to detail, the conviction to character, and the steady pace of the adventure unfolding have once again transported us to the world that up till now belonged only to Edgar Rice Burroughs.All I can say is, “Bravo, Mr. Murray!” I look forward to any additional adventures he wishes to chronicle. You have successfully restored a childhood hero to my reading library and for that I thank you!
11 of 13 people found the following review helpful. A GREAT RETURN TO A GREAT CHARACTER By Paul Bishop This first authorize Tazan novel from the sure hand of pulpmeister Will Murray does a fantastic job of capturing the true spirit of Tarzan, not a grunting monosyllabic cartoonish strongman, but an evolved, brilliant, man of honor equally at home as Lord Greystoke and as the savage Tarzan the Terrible. Murray's prose is assured, never allowing the reader to be pulled out of their 'willing suspension of disbelief.' This is not only a great Tarzan novel, but a great adventure novel filled with strange creatures and heroic exploits. Read it now ...
13 of 16 people found the following review helpful. (Tarzan the Terrible, Burroughs By Raven Tarzan Return to Pal-ul-don by Will MurrayBook Review: Friday, June 26, 2015(BackstoryDuring World War One, The Germans invaded Africa, and Tarzan’s plantation and compound in British East Africa was destroyed. When Lord Greystoke returns, he not only finds the place in ruins, he finds a burned female body he thinks is his wife, Jane Porter Clayton.Tarzan wages a one man war on Germany, and manages to capture and kill Major Schneider and Captain Fritz Schneider, who commanded the battalion that destroyed Tarzan’s home. After an adventure with a female double agent, Bertha Kircher, Lord Greystoke discovers the German Captain’s diary and learns that Jane is still alive, but lost somewhere in Africa. (Tarzan the Untamed, Burroughs, 1920)In the next volume, Lord Greystoke tracks Jane Porter Clayton to an area of Africa that is almost unexplored due to thorn thickets and swamps, which keeps most explorers out. But Jane’s trail leads into this area and where Jane goes, Tarzan is bound to follow.Thus the Ape Man enters the world of Pal-ul-don. Since the area is so remote and unexplored, Tarzan finds animals, plants, and even humans that are several rungs back on the evolutionary scale. There are hairless white men with tails called Ho-Don and black furry men called Waz-Don. There are other, more primitive people and triceratops, which the Natives call gryfs. After many adventures, the Greystokes leave Pal-ul-don behind them. (Tarzan the Terrible, Burroughs, 1921)And now this adventure begins. John Clayton, Lord Greystoke, Tarzan of the Apes—is now simply Flight Officer Clayton of the RAF. It is World War Two and the Nazis have risen to power in Germany. Once again the Dark Continent is in danger from German greed.Tarzan has joined the RAF, though his superior officers express their reservations about his age. But the Ape Man and his family take Kavuru pills (Tarzan’s Quest) which keep them perpetually young. Tarzan is asked to undertake a mission to find a downed plane and a British Secret Agent named Ilex. The plane has crashed on the edge of the thorn thickets and swamps of Pal-ul-don. And the three people on board have parachuted into the midst of the land of men still untouched by time.Tarzan finds himself in more danger than he has ever seen. There are a tribe of small spider-like men with deadly blow guns that inhabit this part of Pal-ul-don. These small savages, the Jad-Jinna, live among spiders and use their poison on their deadly darts. They have a very strange feature—two opposable thumbs. Then too, they speak no language, but converse by gestures and popping finger joints.In taking up the mantle of Edgar Rice Burroughs, Will Murray proves again why he is a first class pulp wordsmith. There is a genuine echo of the original Tarzan novels in this, the first modern Tarzan story authorized by the Burroughs Estate.Far from portraying Tarzan (as some have) as a bumbling savage that can barely say “Me Tarzan. You Jane,” Will Murray paints Tarzan with the brush of the Ape Man’s creator. Tarzan was savage at heart and far more at home in a loincloth in the Jungle, but he also had the Greystoke Estate in England. John Clayton, Lord Greystoke was a member of the House of LordsTarzan spoke many languages, not just the language of the Apes, but French, English, Swahili, Arabic, and other tribal languages. In one adventure where there he discovers a lost Roman city, he learns Latin.Once the action in this novel starts, it is one hair-raising moment after another, as Tarzan and Torn Ear, an elephant, along with a Waz-Ho-don warrior (a mixed race from the joining of the tribes of hairless white men with tails and the tribes of hairy black men with tails,) seek Ilex and the agent’s companions through the valleys and canyons of Pal-ul-don.And before Lord Greystoke leaves Pal-ul-don he will have been captured, escaped, captured again, nearly poisoned, trapped by a great spider, ride a giant turtle, and make new friends. This book is highly recommended. It is Tarzan as Tarzan should be written.I note that the cover has The Wild Adventure of Edgar Rice Burrough’s Tarzan, which I hope means at least one more and perhaps several more books! You rock, Will Murray! A clear five out of five stars!Quoth the Raven…
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