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Beyond the Farthest Star (1941)

di Edgar Rice Burroughs

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When Tangor was blown out of the sky over strife-town Europe in World War II, he was somehow transported to Poloda and once again in a war, 450,000 light years from home, beyond the farthest star.
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Beyond the Farthest Star

Intro (not mine!)

“Beyond the Farthest Star was first published in The Blue Book Magazine, January 1942. It was written in 12 days a week after he completed “Men of the Bronze Age” in October of 1940. Tangor Returns was written in only 5 days -- December 17-21, 1940. It’s first publication was 24 years later in Tales of Three Planets, a hardback edition by Canaveral Press, April 27, 1964. It was published with Beyond the Farthest Star, "The Resurrection of Jimber-Jaw", and The Wizard of Venus.”

First thoughts:

I liked this little collection. Easy to read and before you know it you’re done. A man gets killed in a plane war with a German fighter plane and ends up on a planet 400,000 light years away. Somehow he reaches out to ERB and has him type out his life’s story. How he was appearing on the country of Unis on the planet Polodar, how he fights with the Kaparas, and lastly how he decides to go to another planet to help the Unis folks migrate there.

All the planets in their system are covered with an atmosphere between planets, so it’s possible to fly to another. This never happens. Apparently there was supposed to be a sequel but was never written.

ERB writes some pretty interesting stories. The hero has never a dull moment. Clearly the stories are parodies of the Nazi versus the West way of life. The Kapara live under constant suspicion and oppression which the Unis live like the West.

Not as entertaining as John Carter or Carson of Venus and definitely not on par with Tarzan. Still, pick up a copy and be entertained.


( )
  James_Mourgos | May 19, 2020 |
Such a great story. Very saddened that we will never know how it all ended. I really wish someone would find the rest in an attic somewhere and publish it. ( )
  JHemlock | Sep 20, 2017 |
These aren't the most polished Burroughs stories, but they are an interesting product of the war years and come off as more political than much of his other work. The anti-war sentiments and the theme of fighting against a Stalinesque dictatorship are hard to miss. You should definitely read these if you are a Burroughs completest, or if you just like old science fiction novels with naked men on the cover.

[full review here: http://spacebeer.blogspot.com/2012/11/beyond-farthest-star-by-edgar-rice.html ] ( )
  kristykay22 | Nov 11, 2012 |
Life after death. Is this perhaps Valhalla?
Shot down and expecting to die, thinking he HAD died, he awoke on a strange world to find a new war going on one that he intended to end.

Burroughs crafts an intriguing tale of why wars are fought anyways. ( )
  dragonasbreath | Nov 2, 2011 |
I was very pleasantly surprised by this book. I had recently become quite disenchanted with Burroughs' Princess of Mars series as it seemed to have become by the third installment an endless cycle of fight, win, have loved one kidnapped, rescue them, discover more scary aliens, fight, etc. and I expected this book to be more of the same. Particularly when it began in much the same way: our hero is mysteriously transported via unexplained means to another planet which is remarkably similar to ours in that the environment is hospitable and the natives are pretty much homo sapiens. If one can suspend disbelief enough to buy that, well, there is very little that is still unbelievable. Fortunately, this book diverged from that other series almost immediately. While the culture our hero is thrown into is at war, it is not necessarily because they are a war-loving people. They are forced mostly into self defense by the other society of the planet who are if not all-out war-lovers, are at least in no mood to stop until every other nation is obliterated. As the book was written in 1941, it might not be too hard to guess who this is a thinly-veiled reference to. Our hero is not gifted with any supernatural powers (a la John Carter's ability to jump really, really high because of Mars' lower gravity and his over-developed Earth muscles), he's just an ordinary fighting man who might as well go to service in his new nation. They seem like they have a righteous enough cause. He is extraordinarily lucky, returning from several missions that were expected to kill him.
As mentioned in the forward, Burroughs did quite a bit of world-building, note writing, and outlining, probably intending to turn this into a new series. Unfortunately, only two parts were completed, the second of which was not published until 1964, posthumously. I would very much have liked to know what happens to our hero next, and the end of this volume, which contains both parts, definitely set up the sequel. ( )
1 vota EmScape | Sep 6, 2011 |
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We had attended a party at Diamond Head; and after dinner, comfortable on hikiee and easy-chairs on the lanai, we fell to talking about the legends and superstitions of the ancient Hawaiians.
I was shot down behind the German lines in September, 1939.
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When Tangor was blown out of the sky over strife-town Europe in World War II, he was somehow transported to Poloda and once again in a war, 450,000 light years from home, beyond the farthest star.

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