NEW REVIEW COLUMN AT ALL PULP- PULP CLASSIC!
PULP CLASSIC- Reviews by Joshua Pantalleresco
TARZAN OF THE APES by Edgar Rice Burroughs
Ask me to pick my all time Edgar Rice Burroughs creation, and I think most people would say John Carter. To me, however, Tarzan was Burroughs at his most refined. There is a level of sophistication in Tarzan that is unsurpassed with any other of Burroughs’ characters. In fact, I’ll go so far to say that Tarzan of The Apes is probably Edgar Rice Burroughs’ most complex book in terms of character development, as the Tarzan that starts the novel is not the Tarzan that finishes it. Part origin, part coming of age and part adventure, I’m amazed with just how layered Tarzan really was, and it makes me realize just why this character is still so popular to this day.
This facet of him is presented best when Jane enters the story. He sees her and feels an instant attraction. He starts communicating with her with the English he learns through letters. He is sprung into action when one of his local enemies captures Jane, which leads to Tarzan rescuing her. When he attempts to woo her with a very simplistic approach and is rebuked, he takes the first steps into becoming the gentleman English lord he is descended from. When she leaves, Tarzan seeks her out, learning more how to communicate, act like a man, and all the while making some acute observations about the ways of men he doesn’t approve of.

