Hiển thị các bài đăng có nhãn Tarzan. Hiển thị tất cả bài đăng
Hiển thị các bài đăng có nhãn Tarzan. Hiển thị tất cả bài đăng

Number 1542: Tarzan row, row, rows his boat

Người đăng: Unknown on Chủ Nhật, 16 tháng 3, 2014

Tarzan takes a leisurely trip downriver, helping to row a Roman war galley. Well, not really helping. More properly he’s a slave of the Romans who have a whole civilization tucked into the African jungle.

There are so many lost civilizations in that jungle you might wonder if they have city limits signs: “Leaving Cathne, Entering Opar,” “Welcome to Castra Sanguinarius, your jungle ‘home away from Rome!’”

From Tarzan #21 (1951); written by Gaylord DuBois, art by Jesse Marsh.

















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A couple of Tarzan stories I posted a few years ago. Just click on the pictures.



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Number 1499: Swinging out of 2013 with Tarzan

Người đăng: Unknown on Thứ Hai, 30 tháng 12, 2013

We’re celebrating the end of the year with yet another story of Tarzan in yet another lost city of the jungle.

Cathne is the City of Gold. When Tarzan says he hasn’t been there in 20 years he isn’t quite telling the truth*...the novel, Tarzan and the City of Gold, by Edgar Rice Burroughs, was originally published in Argosy in 1932. Our comic book adventure was published in Dell’s Tarzan #21 in 1951.

Tarzan, who rescues a girl, “Princess” Elaine, in the jungle, ends up with her in Cathne. He goes to tell her dad she is okay and recovering from a broken arm, only to leave her to the evil intentions of lusty Lord Tomos. Tomos has her clapped in a cell with a slave who is ordered to teach her the language, and promises, “I shall see you, Princess...very often!” Whoops. What do you think Lord Tomos has in mind for Elaine? You can almost hear his evil cackle, and see him twirling his mustache. If he had a mustache, that is.

Everything works out fine, thanks to Tarzan, Tantor and some ape buddies. Story by Gaylord Dubois and art by Jesse Marsh.

Happy New Year, and thanks for making this year a good one for Pappy's Golden Age. I’ll see you again on January 1.


























*Maybe Tarzan forgot he re-visited the City of Gold again in Tarzan the Magnificent, published in 1939. Tarzan’s jungle is wall-to-wall lost cities and civilizations, even dinosaurs. No wonder he has trouble remembering.
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Number 1434: Tarzan and the Ant Men, part 2

Người đăng: Unknown on Thứ Hai, 9 tháng 9, 2013


We have returned with the second part of Edgar Rice Burroughs’ Tarzan and the Ant Men, first published in serial form in 1924, and as a Gold Key two-issue comic book in 1968. Go back to yesterday’s posting for part one.

As I mentioned yesterday in my introduction to part one, The Grand Comics Database credits Mike Royer with helping Manning on #175, based on an identification of the inks by Alberto Bacattini.

The fantastic painted covers on both issues are by George Wilson.





















As I read that last panel, Tarzan promising to tell everyone the story of his adventure, I can just imagine Jane’s reaction. “You expect me to believe you’ve been gone for weeks and you were shrunk down to 18 inches? You think I buy a cockamamie story like that? You’ve been with La, haven’t you, you cheating bastard! You go sleep in a tree!”

Something like that, anyway. You have to admit, it is not a likely story to tell one’s wife to cover one’s absence, is it?
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