A Familiar Story at the Earth’s Core

At the Earth's CoreI’m exploring Sci Fi worlds in January, and my first review for the Sci Fi Experience and the Vintage Science Fiction month is At the Earth’s Core by Edgar Rice Burroughs.  First published in hardback in 1922, it’s definitely vintage–and it’s also quintessential Burroughs.

I usually try to avoid spoilers in plot summaries, but…for people who know Burroughs, you really can’t give spoilers.  At the Earth’s Core is about an unusually strong, gray-eyed Earthman who unexpectedly finds himself in a strange other world, where he meets bizarre creatures and multiple intelligent races.  He also meets mostly naked yet noble savages and of course a beautiful princess, who has been captured by a monster race.  He falls in love with the princess, but they’re separated–first because he accidentally offends her, and second by circumstances.  He fights his way through the landscape, succeeds to a place of high esteem in society and wins the princess, only to wind up at the end of the book back on Earth–and all we know at the end is that he may, or may not, have successfully returned to the other world.

Sound kind of familiar?  That’s because this is a faithful description in every particular of BOTH At the Earth’s Core and A Princess of Mars.  I love Burroughs–I always enjoy his books–but with very few exceptions, the man only had one story.  That’s okay, though.  You don’t read Burroughs in breathless suspense about whether the hero will win the girl.  You read it for the strange landscapes, the bizarre creatures and the beautiful prose.  I do, anyway.

This first book in the Pellucidar series follows David Innes on an adventure into the depths of the Earth, where hundreds of miles down his mole-like vehicle breaks out into a strange landscape.  The premise is that the entire inside of the Earth is hollow, presenting a vast expanse of land functioning with reverse gravity to what we know on the outside.  Rather than the horizon dipping down in the distance, it curves up forever.  Pellucidar is lit by a miniature sun at the very center of the planet, so that the world exists in perpetual noon.  All in all, it’s a great example of Burroughs’ wild and intriguing landscapes, be they on the moon, Mars, or the center of the planet.

David meets two different semi-intelligent species that resemble apes, as well as the required race of noble savages, primitive but immensely good-looking.  This race is treated as cattle by the most interesting race, the Mahar.  This is a race of lizard-like people who communicate by a kind of telepathy (but not quite) and have no concept of sound.  The Mahar, I am sorry to say, are at the center of what is probably the most disturbing scene I’ve ever encountered in Burroughs.  Remember I said the human-like race is treated as cattle?  There’s a pretty horrible incident relating to that, unusually horrible for Burroughs.

Besides the intelligent species, David encounters a wide variety of monsters.  He comes to the Earth’s core along with a helpful amateur paleontologist, who frequently recognizes species–although I suspect Burroughs made most of them up.

The positives of the book are definitely the weird landscape and creatures, along with plenty of action.  This book doesn’t share the problem of most of Burroughs’ other first-books-in-a-series, of starting slowly.  We get straight into the adventure.  This one also has an interesting concept about time not existing in a world with no celestial bodies and no clocks.  It frankly doesn’t make a bit of sense, but it’s interesting to think about.

On the negative side, there is a slightly disquieting element here of the noble white man bringing civilization to the savages–though to be fair, there’s no clear ethnicity among the savages, and the truth is that they aren’t fending all that well for themselves.  Still, David throws himself into changing a world that he really knows very little about.  And I’m not sure teaching weaponry is really the way to advance a people.

I can’t put my finger on why, but David didn’t appeal to me as much as his obvious counterpart, John Carter.  It sounds silly to say, when typical Burroughs heroes are nearly interchangable…but there was still something different.  David is upstanding and brave, as all Burroughs heroes are, but he maybe wasn’t quite as noble, or quite as capable.  Or he just didn’t come with that fascinating opening paragraph, about always being a young man, always a fighting man.  While I wouldn’t have said that Burroughs heroes were distinctive, David still didn’t have as strong a voice.

That may about sum up the book.  I liked it.  I enjoyed it.  It is, as all Burroughs novels are, a grand adventure in the finest tradition of pulp science fiction.  At the same time, it didn’t grab me quite the way other Burroughs books have.  I don’t know if that’s a flaw of the book, or if that’s just me–if maybe after forty-odd books, the usual Burroughs story is finally starting to feel old.

I’ll be going on to read the rest of the Pellucidar series…and perhaps it’ll grow on me!  Even if it doesn’t get any better than the first one, I still expect to have a perfectly rollicking time with it.

Author’s Site: http://www.edgarriceburroughs.ca/

Other reviews:
Luke Reviews
Book Addiction
Anyone else?

Buy At the Earth’s Core here, though I’d recommend buying A Princess of Mars instead.

Saturday Snapshot: “Do Sit and Enjoy Life”

Whew–I don’t know about you, but 2013 seems to be starting crazy busy!  With very good things…but BUSY!  So for Saturday Snapshot today, I thought perhaps a few peaceful pictures from one of my favorite places.

You were already guessing Kensington Gardens, right? 🙂

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The inscription reads: “Pam Weisweiller was here – do sit and enjoy life”

So this weekend, I hope you take some time to just sit and enjoy life!

2012 Reading Challenges – Wrap-Up

We’re starting 2013, and it’s time to check in on reading challenge results for last year!  I’ve been trying to focus my reading selections, especially in the last couple of months, so I’m happy with where I ended up.  I’ve cleared long-time unread books off my shelves, finished lots of long-lingering series, and read new books by some beloved authors.  All in all–a good year in reading!

So, let’s look at the details.  As usual, linked titles go to my reviews, starred titles have reviews coming, and feel free to ask if you want to know more about anything!

Continue reading “2012 Reading Challenges – Wrap-Up”

Bloody Jack–at School, at Sea, and on the River

Mississippi Jack
Book 5, which has 14 discs in all

I have been continuing through the audio adventures of Jacky Faber by L. A. Meyer, read by Katherine Kellgren, and am now halfway through the series.  They continue enormous fun, and are great to listen to one after another, as they tend to directly follow each other chronologically–though I’ve decided to take a break for a while after the fifth one.

I reviewed the first audiobook here, Bloody Jack, about how a London street urchin disguises herself as a boy to join a Royal Navy ship, hoping to “better her condition.”  Along the way, she meets close comrades and gains the nickname “Bloody Jack”–which, as Jacky likes to say, is not her fault.  Mostly.

I’ll try to refrain from spoilers, but I will tell you that her deception is found out by the end of the book.  Book Two, Curse of the Blue Tattoo, picks up with Jacky being dropped off in Boston at The Lawson Peabody School for Young Girls, where the formidable Mistress Pimm will try–with mixed success–to turn her into a proper lady.  We get to meet two of my favorite characters in this volume.  First, Amy Trevelyne, Jacky’s dearest friend, who comes out of her shell under Jacky’s influence, and who tries–with mixed success!–to rein in Jacky’s wilder impulses.  Second, we meet Jacky’s nemesis, Miss Clarissa Worthington Howe (of the Virginia Howes), who is very much the fine lady–but can hold her in a fight too, with words or claws.  This book also has an element of mystery to it, as Jacky gets involved exploring the death of a serving girl, and the very creepy minister who lives next door.

Book Three, Under the Jolly Roger, sees Jacky at sea again.  Through a series of mishaps, she ends up on the H.M.S. Wolverine, commanded by mad Captain Blodgett.  Jacky’s gender is discovered and her virtue is sorely threatened, but as usual she carries on with aplomb.  This book is really two plots, and Part Two sees Jacky setting up as a privateer–and fighting at the Battle of Trafalgar in the climax.  I remember when I read this one the first time, I had to stop reading it before I went to bed.  Too exciting!

We meet another favorite character here, Higgins, Jacky’s ever faithful man servant.  I can’t tell you how delighted I was listening when Higgins first turned up!  It’s been a long time and I’d forgotten exactly how he got into the story.  Higgins is a prim and proper gentleman’s gentleman, who nevertheless has a taste for adventure.  He faithfully follows Jacky through her madcap adventures, always ready to offer a wise word, a tut of disapproval, a cup of tea or a hot bath.  Just to clarify here, it becomes quickly apparent (though never said in so many words) that Higgins is gay, which makes him one of the few men Jacky doesn’t flirt with.

Book Four, In the Belly of the Bloodhound, sends Jacky back to Boston and school, trying to lay low and avoid the British intelligence officers pursuing her for piracy.  The plan to stay out of trouble goes awry when Jacky and the girls of the school are abducted by slavers, and carried towards South Africa aboard the Bloodhound.  This is my favorite book in the series to date.  Jacky is certainly not going to take slavery lying down, and she martials the girls into a fighting force.  I love the girls of The Lawson Peabody School, and I love watching them grow ever stronger and more confident.  We get a lot of Clarissa, as well as little Rebecca Adams (granddaughter of John Adams) and Dolly Fraser–who later marries Mr. Madison.  Along with getting a wonderful cast of brave girls in this book, Jacky doesn’t meet any pretty boys–meaning for once she has to curtail her sparking.

Jacky lights out West in Book Five, Mississippi Jack, commanding a showboat down the river along with Higgins and a host of familiar and new characters.  Jacky meets Native Americans (including this unnamed Indian woman who went west with that expedition…) and the delightful, hilarious, roaring river man Mike Fink.

As I think about my plot summaries, I realize I’ve left off a major character–Mr. Jaimy Fletcher, who is doomed throughout this series to chase along always a few steps behind Jacky, his fiancee.  Meyer often intersperses Jacky’s adventures with letters (literal or mental) from Jaimy to Jacky, updating what’s occurring with him.  And here I come to my biggest criticism of the series.  On my first read-through, I recall being pretty neutral about Jaimy.  On this second pass, I have to say I think he’s all wrong for her.  They meet as children in the first book and are faithful to each other (mostly) for nine subsequent books…but honestly, I’m not convinced of their relationship’s validity because they’re so rarely actually together.

A bigger problem–Jaimy keeps wanting Jacky to settle down.  And that’s just not who she is.  I don’t have a problem with Higgins or Amy, who clearly value Jacky for her high spirits and just wish she would restrain some of her more dangerous impulses.  Jaimy wants to marry Jacky and install her in a cottage somewhere while he goes to sea and she…I don’t know, raises babies?  I don’t believe Jaimy loves Jacky for who she is; he’s imagined the girl he thinks he wants, and for some inexplicable reason has given her Jacky’s face.  I’d like to believe Meyer will eventually break the two of them up…but I just don’t see it happening.  So I have to hope Jaimy will mature a bit.  As of book ten, he’s still working on it.

As I mentioned, I’ve been listening to the audiobooks on this pass through–the books are great as paper novels, and they’re also wonderful on audio, thanks to the delightful talents of Katherine Kellgren.  She gives us Jacky’s Cockney accent, brings believability to her melodrama, and makes me like Jacky’s singing much more than I ever did on paper.  She also gives us excellent voices for a vast cast of characters, with accents from British to American to deep South to Irish to French, with characters who are male, female, young, old–or even bellowing Mike Fink.  She even makes different characters sound different while singing.  All in all, I’m a big fan.

But I’m a fan of the whole series.  On paper or audio, I highly recommend following the adventures of Bloody Jack!

Author’s Site: http://www.jackyfaber.com

Other reviews:
Gallivanting Girl Books
The Lostent Wife
The Magic of Ink
Anyone else?

Launching Stonehenge Writers

Stonehenge 2It’s a new year, and I have exciting news to share–I’ve joined a group blog!

During 2012, I joined Stonehenge, a writing critique group with a loose focus on speculative fiction (science fiction, fantasy and horror).  I’ve met many amazing people, and they’ve given me so many helpful insights about my own writing, and writing in general.

Many of us have blogs or want to have blogs.  We’ve decided to pool our talents for the Stonehenge Writers blog, which officially launches today.  I don’t expect it to change things around here, but I’ll also be posting about once a month on the group blog.

My first post went up this morning, on the subject of New Year’s Resolutions.  Are you resolving to write in 2013?  I’m sharing some suggestions that have helped me chase down my goals.

I hope you’ll come visit the new blog!  There are nine of us, with diverse ideas and interests.  I know I for one have a lot of fun at our in-person meetings, and learn a lot too–and I expect the blog to go pretty much the same way! 🙂