Dark Horse to reprint John Carter of Mars comics from 1970's Weird Worlds and Tarzan
Dark Horse Comics is collecting and reprinting the John Carter of Mars stories that were originally published in the 1970's comic books Weird Worlds #1-#7 and Tarzan #207-#209. The forthcoming volume, titled John Carter of Mars: Weird Worlds and scheduled to be released in January 2011, features the handsome work of comics legends Marv Wolfman, Murphy Anderson, Gray Morrow, Sal Amendola, Joe Orlando, and Howard Chaykin.Looks like fans of Barsoom will be spending more time at the comic book store. Dark Horse has announced John Carter of Mars: Weird Worlds, a new book collecting John Carter's adventures from DC Comics' Weird Worlds and Tarzan series, set for publication January 12, 2011. Unlike the Jesse Marsh book, this one looks to be a paperback book with a price of 14.99. You can see more info at http://www.firstcomicsnews.com/?p=12825
arv Wolfman (W), Howard Chaykin (A), Murphy Anderson (A), Gray Morrow (A), Sal
Amendola (A), and Joe Orlando (I/Cover) On sale Jan 12
FC, 112 pages
$14.99
TPB, 7″ x 10″
Since his serialized debut in All-Story magazine in 1912, the spacefaring
adventurer John Carter of Mars has become one of Edgar Rice Burroughs’ most
beloved characters. The star of decades worth of novels and comic books, he’s
soon to be immortalized on the silver screen as well, in the upcoming Walt
Disney Pictures major film release John Carter of Mars! In this volume, John
Carter, an ex-soldier turned prospector, is transported to Mars—“Barsoom,” as it
is known to its natives—under mysterious circumstances, and becomes a champion
dedicated to protecting his new home and newly found love, the princess Dejah
Thoris, from warring alien civilizations and a host of deadly Barsoomian beasts!
• Collecting stories originally published in Tarzan #207–#209 and Weird Worlds
#1–#7.
• Featuring the work of comics legends Marv Wolfman, Murphy Anderson, Gray
Morrow, Sal Amendola, Joe Orlando, and Howard Chaykin!
Amendola (A), and Joe Orlando (I/Cover) On sale Jan 12
FC, 112 pages
$14.99
TPB, 7″ x 10″
Since his serialized debut in All-Story magazine in 1912, the spacefaring
adventurer John Carter of Mars has become one of Edgar Rice Burroughs’ most
beloved characters. The star of decades worth of novels and comic books, he’s
soon to be immortalized on the silver screen as well, in the upcoming Walt
Disney Pictures major film release John Carter of Mars! In this volume, John
Carter, an ex-soldier turned prospector, is transported to Mars—“Barsoom,” as it
is known to its natives—under mysterious circumstances, and becomes a champion
dedicated to protecting his new home and newly found love, the princess Dejah
Thoris, from warring alien civilizations and a host of deadly Barsoomian beasts!
• Collecting stories originally published in Tarzan #207–#209 and Weird Worlds
#1–#7.
• Featuring the work of comics legends Marv Wolfman, Murphy Anderson, Gray
Morrow, Sal Amendola, Joe Orlando, and Howard Chaykin!
2 comments:
- This is great news! I've got these comics stashed somewhere in my long boxes, but it would be a pain to find and pull them. I'm so glad to see that this old stuff is getting reprinted. Way to go Dark Horse! By the way, have you seen this article on io9.com: http://io9.com/5616081/how-edgar-rice-burroughs-became-one-of-the-twentieth-centurys-biggest-scifi-authors I just thought it was interesting and wanted to share it with you. Based on the final paragraph, it looks like the author is planning on reviewing all 11 of the Barsoom books in the coming weeks.
- Maybe the Mike Kaluta Carson of Venus stuff will published too.
[via JCOM Reader and Doc Mars]
Maybe the Mike Kaluta Carson of Venus stuff will published too.
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Warren Ellis' nod to Burroughs. Reply
I just discovered them a year or two ago.
I've read the first 3 so far and I've also read a few of the Pellucidar books and like them too.
These books are just fun escapism for when you don't want social commentary, philosophizing or realism.
One of the main redeeming features of Number of the Beast by Heinlein is that it convinced me to try these classic books. Reply
I read Carson of Venus, which rocked less so, but which was still really entertaining. Reply
Like Carter on Mars, Superman gains strength and agility on a lower gravity world, and like Tarzan, is raised in primitive circumstances. Reply
i sense a pen name ;) Reply
I think.
I know most races (except the Reds) believe their the first, or the best or something to that nature. Reply
I don't think I have a problem with the genre. I loved the Gor books in my early teens and by all accounts there are similarities there. Unlike, say, Jules Verne, Burroughs just seemed very dated to me.
Different strokes I guess. Reply
Read them all, they fascinated me; of course I first red them at 13. Reply
I had previously read and thoroughly enjoyed the Tarzan and Land That Time Forgot books (and I'm all over the Weismuller Tarzan movies), but something finally clicked for me when reading "A Princess of Mars": ERB was totally writing Gary Sue escapism. Both Tarzan and John are just, like, totally the awesomest at everything and wicked strong and way smart and the chicks just totally fall for them and they get to be naked and run around and kill everything. I love him and have been reading his stuff for over a decade now, but I can't shake the idea, now, that he's doing Twilight for dudes.
Nevertheless, go Team Dejah! Reply
Of course, there is still racism in it, but I'm just sayin'. Reply
I would love to read someone's pastiche written from the perspective of the Tharks, which describes their culture with richness and how they tolerated the light-skinned barbarian only because he could have kicked their asses. Reply
I would also love to read a Thark based fan-fiction/pastiche. For some reason Tars Tarkas and the rest of the Tharks always struck me as more rich and tragic characters than anyone else, having gone through such loss without being able to show it, while also having to face uncouth and violent barbarians. Reply
The old "was it all a dream of an aging romantic?", then "yeah, it probably was and now he's dead", then "no it wasn't and you'll probably never know if he's really dead or not" has never looked better than here. Reply
Just put up on deviant art today, some excellent new Mars art by Joe Jusko.
[joejusko.deviantart.com] Reply
The Mars series is wonderful, as are the first two Tarzan novels (I'm still waiting for a faithful adaptation -- no one has managed it yet.) Reply
But do nubile teens want to do him?
I rest my case. Reply
Good enough?
BTW number 23 is behind Waldo. Reply
And I guess the black, negroid monkey people (with tails!) in At the Earth's Core didn't bother you guys much.... Reply
'manlike creatures..... to all appearances strikingly similar in aspect to the Negro of Africa, except that the head receded more rapidly above the eyes, leaving little or no forehead' Reply
I think it's high time for a revival of the Scientific Romance/Planetary Adventure story. Reply
The beautiful blacks should be played by blacks, and the red men should be played by white people, for the facial characteristics alone.
They are all supposed to be aliens, and aliens of different races, so painting a white guy coal black and sticking him with coal painted black guys and orientals would just look stupid. Reply
John Carter frequently dyed his skin red and passed as one of the indigent people without a problem. It was in every single book. The only difference between those and the white men of Mars was that of the skin color. And the lack of hair. Reply
You can't DO any of this stuff on film. And the moment you put clothes on Dejah Thoris? FAIL. Reply
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