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Book Details

Tarzan Alive

85.7% complete
1972
Unknown
Never (or unknown...)
Adventure stories, American - History and criticism
Africa - In literature
Burroughs, Edgar Rice, 1875-1950 - Characters - Tarzan
Fantasy fiction, American - History and criticism
Tarzan (Fictitious character)
See 38
1888: The World
1 - (I-1): Out to Sea
2 - (I-2): The Savage Home
3 - (I-3): Life and Death
4 - (I-4 through 1-5): The Apes
1898: The World
5 - (I-6, I-7): The Difference
6 - (I-8 through I-10): Loss and Revenge
7 - (Part of I-11; VI-1 through VI-4): Growing Up
1908: The World
8 - (VI-5 through VI-12): The Outsider: Dreamer and Joker
9 - (Last part of I-11 and through I-2o): Kingship and Love
10 - (I-21 through I-28): Renunciation
11 - (II-1 through II-15): From Ape to Savage
12 - (II-16 through 11-23): The Chief, the She, the City of Gold
13 - (II-23 through II-26): Journeys' End
14 - (Between II and III): The Great Trek and the Elixir
15 - (III): The Beasts
16 - (IV, 1-12; XX): Problems
17 - (V; IV, 13-27): The Waters of Lethe, the Jewels of Opar
18 - (VII): War and Freedom
1919: The World
19 - (VIII): Guru
20 - (IX; X): The Lion and the Ants
21 - (XI; XII; XIII): Lord of Many Places
1929: The World
22 - (XIV—XIX; XXI; XXIV; XXIII): Hail and Farewell
1943: The World
23 - (XXII): Exit Tarzan, Smiling
24 - Tarzan and the Monomyth
25 - The Rest Is Silence
Addendum 1 - A Case of Identity
Addendum 2 - A Case of a Case of Identity Recased
Addendum 3 - The Greystoke Lineage
Addendum 4 - What Happened to Black Michael?
Addendum 5 - Chronology
A Selected Bibliography
Index
Book Cover
Has a genre Has an extract In my library 
14045
No series
Copyright © 1972 by Philip José Farmer
This is for the man who is the real "Lord Greystoke" and for the man who brought him to the attention of the world, albeit in a fictional disguise.
The population of the world was 1,483,000,000 as compared with more than double that in 1970.
May contain spoilers
The forest god's skin gleamed as he crossed an open space, and the moonlight seemed to bless him.
No comments on file
Extract (may contain spoilers)
It was at the edge of ten that he became sharply aware of the difference in physical appearance between him and the mangani.  He had been ashamed of his hairlessness for a long time, and he hated to be called a tarmangani.  But not until he went to drink one day from a lake in the bush jungle did he realize how ugly his face was.  He was accompanied by a male child of one of Kala's younger sisters and so got a chance to compare his face with his playmate's in the mirrorlike waters.

He became so intent on his distressing comparison that he did not hear Sabor, the lioness, creeping up on them.  A moment later, he was getting his first, and possibly last, lesson in how to swim.  When the lioness, roaring, had sprung on them, she had forced him to dive into the lake. He came up almost at once, and, in an effort to keep his head above water, discovered how to dog-paddle.  His companion was dead, and the lioness was eyeing Tarzan.  Tarzan knew that the big cats could swim, and he paddled away, meanwhile giving the distress cry of the mangani.  The tribe came and chased the killer away.  Thereafter, Tarzan swam frequently whenever he got the chance.  The mangani thought this strange but did not complain.  They were happy because it helped reduce his odor, so offensive to them.  Like most rain-forest creatures, they had fewer sweat glands than the dwellers of the open spaces.  They were also more vegetarian than Tarzan and so did not have essential carnivore's stink.

Shortly thereafter, Tarzan again visited the cabin by the seashore.  This time he found out how to unlock the door, and he entered the world of man.

(He had never entered the storehouse.  It had been hit by lightning, had exploded, and had burned between his two visits.)

In the cabin he found a hunting knife of the best Sheffield steel and a child's illustrated alphabet.  These were the keys to unlock the treasure of his human heritage.
A is for Archer
Who shoots with a bow.

B is for Boy,
His first name is Joe.
At this time, he did not correlate the pictures with the words below.  Indeed, he not only did not recognize the letters as printed symbols for words, he did not recognize the illustrations as such.  He had never seen a drawing before, so he viewed them only as meaningless patterns of color.  But, after a half hour of looking at them, something silently clicked in his mind.  The patterns swam out of chaos to become configurations, some of which he recognized.  This was his first step in his long self-education in reading and writing.  It would be an extraordinary, even heroic feat.  Admittedly, only a genius could have done it.  But Tarzan, as is demonstrated in Addendum 2, belonged to a clan which produced geniuses, both mental and physical.

Looking through the book, he recognized Manu, the monkey, and Numa, the lion, and his old enemy, Histah, the snake.  Even the reptile's picture raised a specter of cold on the back of his neck.

 

Added: 09-May-2024
Last Updated: 09-May-2024

Publications

 01-Aug-1981
Playboy Press
Mass Market Paperback
In my libraryOrder from amazon.comHas a cover imageBook Edition Cover
Date Issued:
Cir 01-Aug-1981
Format:
Mass Market Paperback
Cover Price:
$2.75
Pages*:
218
Catalog ID:
16876
Internal ID:
43604
Publisher:
ISBN:
0-872-16876-X
ISBN-13:
978-0-872-16876-3
Printing:
1
Country:
United States
Language:
English
TARZAN ALIVE

"THIS IS SOMETHING UNIQUE.  THIS BOOK OF DELIGHTFUL LITERARY FUN AND GAMES COULD LEAD TO THE BIRTH OF A NEW TARZAN CULT." Publishers Weekly

"THE CONVINCING, IF MIND-WARPING STORY OF LORD GREYSTOKE, BEST KNOWN AS 'TARZAN.'" El Paso Herald Post

"A FASCINATING PHANTASMAGORIA OF TARZAN'S CAREER, WHO MUST BE THE ONLY HUMAN EVER TO BARTER A LOIN CLOTH FOR A SEAT IN THE HOUSE OF LORDS." Rocky Mountain News

"WITH DUMBFOUNDING ENERGY AND HIGH GOOD HUMOR. PHILIP JOSÉ FARMER HAS PRODUCED A VERITABLE PH.D. THESIS ON THE REAL TARZAN, WHO, OF COURSE, IS ALIVE AND VERY BUSY TO THIS DAY." Theodore Sturgeon
Cover:
Book CoverBook Back CoverBook Spine
Notes and Comments:
First Playboy Paperbacks printing August 1981
Cover illustration copyright © 1981 by PEI Books, Inc.
Image File
01-Aug-1981
Playboy Press
Mass Market Paperback

Related

Author(s)

 Philip José Farmer
Birth: 26 Jan 1918 Terre Haute, Indiana, USA
Death: 25 Feb 2009 Peoria, IL, USA

Awards

No awards found
*
  • I try to maintain page numbers for audiobooks even though obviously there aren't any. I do this to keep track of pages read and I try to use the Kindle version page numbers for this.
  • Synopses marked with an asterisk (*) were generated by an AI. There aren't a lot since this is an iffy way to do it - AI seems to make stuff up.
  • When specific publication dates are unknown (ie prefixed with a "Cir"), I try to get the publication date that is closest to the specific printing that I can.
  • When listing chapters, I only list chapters relevant to the story. I will usually leave off Author Notes, Indices, Acknowledgements, etc unless they are relevant to the story or the book is non-fiction.
  • Page numbers on this site are for the end of the main story. I normally do not include appendices, extra material, and other miscellaneous stuff at the end of the book in the page count.






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