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The Gods of Mars by Edgar Rice Burroughs

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By Betty Young Posted on May 6, 2026
In Category - The First Archive
Burroughs, Edgar Rice, 1875-1950 Burroughs, Edgar Rice, 1875-1950
English
Have you ever wondered what happens after you die—and then found out it’s ten times weirder than you imagined? That’s exactly what happens to John Carter when he gets zapped back to Mars (Barsoom, if you’re fancy) after a peaceful life on Earth. Only this time, it’s not a rescue mission. He ends up in the land of the dead—a creepy prison valley ruled by the terrifying, plant-eating Holy Therns. And just when he finds his old friends and the love of his life, Dejah Thoris, guess what? He’s trapped again. This sequel ramps up everything you loved about the first book: wild creatures, sword fights, loyal monsters, and a secret society that decides who lives and who dies on the whole planet. If you like tales of a one-man army battling impossible odds (and weird psychic plants), pull up a chair. This one moves faster than a Martian hound twice your size.
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The Story

When we met John Carter in The Princess of Mars, he was a Civil War captain magically transported to a dying planet of green barbarians and beautiful red princesses. Now he’s back—and things got a lot darker. He materializes in the Valley Dor, the rotting slice of paradise where Martians go to die. But instead of rolling clouds and harp music, he finds butt-ugly plant men and white-robed priests—the Holy Therns—who manipulate everybody into thinking this corpse-filled swamp is a sacred reward. Carter, being Carter, says “Nope,” escapes, finds his old sidekick Tars Tarkas, picks fights with the planet’s best warriors, and races to stop this ancient scam before it kills his kingdom. Along the way, he uncovers a nasty secret about Mars’s sacred past, loses his temper (a lot), and makes some weird monster friends who happen to be smarter than they look.

Why You Should Read It

The vibe here is kinda crazy—like if a pulp western writer scripted Gladiator mixed with an alien heist movie. Do the science make sense? Not one bit. But that’s not why you picked this up. You read it for Carter’s blunt, polite American energy smashing into a rigid caste system led by cold white killers who are basically space snake handlers. And the friendship between him and Tars Tarkas stole my heart: one’s a dork who runs through walls, the other is a four-armed grim reaper who casually says things like “I shall help you kidnap that ship because cabbage oaths.” Personally, I loved Carter versus a mystery that chunks ideas of fake religion, exile, and second chances into a 384 pages raider ship fantasy. He also does things because his gut says it’s right, not law—which feels real and, at grade 8 levels, says something true about bully empires and cheap cults.

Final Verdict

This book’s not for you if you want deep politics or physics mid-battle. It IS for lovers of old-school interstellar he-man stories (Conan, early Kilo-Five Halo, actual 20s pulps when a sword felt sexier than a blaster). Also worth scanning for Burroughs’ clear impatience with class division: even pulp heroes got to stare at corrupt clergy and shove righteous faces. But honestly, if all you need is two hours of good sword-flesh burn on a cracked planet with bickering outlaw trees and that one talking thing with tusks? This is catnip. Perfect for: anyone who read The Maze Runner books when they were 13 and wished Gally fought a dinosaur headed by a cult. Let’s face it: a world this bonkers needs us idiots with swords plus two brain cells free.



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