“WHAT STRANGE LANDS AND STRANGER PEOPLE LAY OFF THERE BEYOND THE BEYOND?”: FIRST EDITION OF BURROUGHS’ PIRATES OF VENUS
BURROUGHS, Edgar Rice. Pirates of Venus. Tarzana, California: Edgar Rice Burroughs, (1934). Octavo, original blue cloth, cartographic endpapers, original dust jacket.
First edition of the first novel in Burrough’s fascinating interplanetary adventure, his first Carson Napier adventure on Venus, a world of giant spiders, winged men, evil spies and the secret of perpetual youth, with dust jacket design and illustrations by J. Allen St. John, in scarce dust jacket.
In 1931, soon after completing Tarzan and the Leopard Men, Burroughs “began work on a new series set in Venus, with a new hero Carson Napier (named after a friend Burroughs had made while he was in the cavalry in Arizona more than 30 years earlier)” (Zeuschner 405). This interplanetary adventure, Burroughs’ third sci-fi series, is said to have been triggered by “a squabble between Burroughs and one of his imitators… The opening volume of the series Pirates of Venus… includes a ‘frame’ of considerable complexity involving Burroughs, Jason Gridley [of Burroughs’ Pellucidar series], and Burroughs’ real-life friend and associate Cyril Ralph Rothmund,” general manager of Burroughs’ publishing company (Lupoff, 102). With “First Edition” on copyright page; map of Venus (Amtor) drawn by Burroughs. Featuring full-color illustration on front dust jacket panel, black-and-white frontispiece and four plates by J. Allen St. John. Currey, 91. Zeuschner 406. Porges II:64. Clute & Nicholls, 178. Small “First Edition” stamp, trace of label removal to front free endpaper, not affecting illustration. Bookseller ticket. Front flap from another dust jacket tipped to verso of half title; slight abrasion to rear pastedown not affecting illustration.
Text and plates generally fresh, light edge wear to bright cloth. A near-fine copy in a beautiful dust jacket.