Synthetic Men of Mars

Edgar Rice BURROUGHS

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Synthetic Men of Mars

“HIS IMAGINATION KNEW NO BOUNDS”: FIRST EDITION OF EDGAR RICE BURROUGHS’ SYNTHETIC MEN OF MARS

BURROUGHS, Edgar Rice. Synthetic Men of Mars. Tarzana, California: Edgar Rice Burroughs, (1940). Octavo, original pebbled blue cloth, original laminated dust jacket.

First edition of “the last full-fledged novel” in Burroughs’ fascinating Barsoom series set on Mars, where a heroic warrior combats the evil designs of a mad scientist and an army of synthetically grown creatures called hormads, battling to save the woman he loves and the fate of the planet, an especially handsome copy in the original laminated dust jacket.

In Synthetic Men of Mars, Burroughs brings back the notorious scientist Ras Thavas, Master Mind of Mars, whose attempt to create an army of hormads--synthetic men grown in vats—goes horribly wrong. The novel’s hero Vor Daj has his brain transferred into a hormad body to rescue the woman he loves, only to face dangerous mobs of hormads and a massive slimy growth generated within Thavas’ laboratory that threatens to destroy the planet. In exploring the hormad theme “and the fascinating details that accompany it, Burroughs certainly was inspired. Once he had launched the idea, his imagination knew no bounds” (Porges II:899). This is “the last full-fledged novel of the series” that began in 1912 with Burroughs’ first story Under the Moons of Mars (published in book form as A Princess of Mars in 1917). The series would conclude with Llana of Gathol (a collection of novellas, 1948) and the posthumous novella, John Carter of Mars (1964) (Lupoff, 98). “First Edition” stated on copyright page; with dust jacket art and line-art on spine, black-and-white frontispiece and four full-page illustrations by Burroughs’ son John Coleman Burroughs. “As with several other of the Burroughs first editions, the dust jacket appears in (1) a laminated state [as here], and (2) an unlaminated state”: no priority established (Zeuschner 794). Serialized in Argosy Weekly (January-February 1929). Currey, 90. Zeuschner 511. Porges II:78, 1262. See Zeuschner 510.

Text and plates fresh with only small closed marginal tears to several leaves (209-215) and one illustration, not affecting text or image; minor tape reinforcement to verso of exceptionally colorful dust jacket. A scarce about-fine copy.

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