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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Tarzan, with a twist.
Farmer's interest in the Tarzan stories of Burroughs is well known, and he has written his own stories in the past. This is not a Tarzan story, although it does involve a "savage" growing up among various jungle tribes. This book is extremely well written, with many fascinating passages throughout. In the end, Farmer still manages to weave a connection with the...
Published on August 11, 2000

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3 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars Sick story by a perverted mind
You have to wonder why some publishers will print perverted trash like this and not publish good stories. This story is based on the premise that a demented man wants his son to be the next Tarzan, and so dumps him off in an African village, where he is adopted despite being white. He doesn't even bother to research the nature of the tribe when he does this. The tribe,...
Published on August 31, 2007 by J. Davidson


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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Tarzan, with a twist., August 11, 2000
By A Customer
This review is from: Lord Tyger (Mass Market Paperback)
Farmer's interest in the Tarzan stories of Burroughs is well known, and he has written his own stories in the past. This is not a Tarzan story, although it does involve a "savage" growing up among various jungle tribes. This book is extremely well written, with many fascinating passages throughout. In the end, Farmer still manages to weave a connection with the classic Burroughs tales. This one is worth a read for the quality writing alone, and may be among Farmer's best.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars One of Farmer's best; a Burroughs pastiche, October 4, 2006
Now that Philip Jose Farmer's wild books from the late 1960's-mid 1970's that are being reprinted, the reintroduction of "Lord Tyger" to the world appears overdue. It is the best Farmer book of this period. The title character is a Tarzan-like individual who is raised by people he doesn't believe to be human, attains mastery of the jungle and its animal denizens, and torments the local tribe of primitives (the Wantso). The descriptions of LT's encounters with the Wantso and the chieftain of a rival tribe are entertaining and frequently hilarious. No SF writer has more fun with the science of anthropology than Farmer.

The entire novel is a fast read and packed with adventure. At his best, Farmer's adventures seem to contain as many ideas, plot turns and dramatic action sequences as entire series by more mediocre authors. I had the misfortune of trying to read two volumes of the "Decology" by "L Ron Hubbard" many years ago, and it's plain to me that average SF adventure writers do not have what Farmer had, especially around the time of "Lord Tyger."

Farmer is a dedicated fan of the works of Edgar Rice Burroughs, and books like "Lord Tyger" make Farmer appear to be a more informed and (much) less restrained Burroughs. This is a pastiche of what I consider to be the best of the Tarzan books (I, VI and VII), which I recommend. The idea of the "noble savage" by Rousseau gets ill treatment here, especially if one's idea of "noble" is based on civilized ideals. In fact, the presence of Tyger's insane benefactor Boygur speaks to the rather sick consequences of trying to make monsters out of men.

"Lord Tyger," like all of Farmer's Tarzan-inspired fiction, is worth seeking out and buying. It is excellent, but clearly not for younger readers.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars What if Tarzan were real...?, July 15, 2003
This review is from: Lord Tyger (Mass Market Paperback)
It is difficult to describe the story of this novel without spoiling it. Ras Tyger is the lord of the Jungle. His mother was an ape, his father was God. He lives a savage life in the jungle, tormenting the native warriors while seducing their women. Then events lead him to begin a seach for the truth of his origins.

It's an interesting take on the Tarzan legend, but not for the easily offended. Farmer gives Burroughs a run for is money as far as action and adventure are concerned. Definitely not for children, but if you love the Tarzan character, give it a shot.

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5.0 out of 5 stars Obscene, Blasphemous, Deranged, and Brilliant, July 12, 2010
By 
Michael J. Mccormick (San Francisco, CA USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Lord Tyger (Hardcover)
I just finished reading the first two Tarzan novels by Edgar Rice Burroughs when I came across Lord Tyger by Philip Jose Farmer. Wow! Edgar Rice Burroughs was a hack. As Gore Vidal says in his intro to the (I think) Signet addition - Burroughs was innocent of science and literature, his writing was uneven, and his characterizaton of women and Africans and African-Americans is nothing short of embarrasing and even outrageously offensive (by contemporary standards anyway). Burroughs also relied far too often on fantastic coincidences and deus ex machinas. All in all, a mediocre or even a bad writer with a few brilliant ideas. Farmer takes this material and writes a homage to it that is far better than the original.

Now for some spoilers: The premise of this book (which is actually revealed fairly early on) is that a young boy has been kidnapped by a deranged millionair who is trying to reproduce Burrough's Tarzan by having the boy grow up in a secluded African vally, raised by people who claim they are apes. Farmer focuses on all the reasons why this scheme could not work in real life, and the reality of an adolescent being left to his own devices among gorillas and an African tribe (whose sexual mores are no more or less perverse than civilized people but simply different given that it is a stone age village of less than two score people). It is a sad, horrendous, and yet exiciting and occasionally funny tale. Every bit as exiciting as the Burrough's originals and as far as I am concerned more realistic and intriguing. It also has none of the chauvanism or racism or imperialism of the Burrough's novels. I also though it hilarious that Ras Tyger's foster parents were named Mary and Joseph (or the Arabic equivalents) and that he believed he was the Son of God because of his rather odd circumstances and strange upbringing and uniqueness in that hidden valley.

As one reviewer said, this book is not for kids. It treats sexuality in far too frank and honest a way for many people to be comfortable with. It is also a pretty violent book and has some very tragic and intense scenes in it. But for anyone who like Tarzan but can't get over how unrealistic the whole idea of Tarzan is, or who finds Burrough's original tales too offensive and hackneyed to bother with - this book is the solution. I would add, however, that I enjoyed this a lot more than I would have after reading the first two of Burrough's Tarzan books.
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3 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars Sick story by a perverted mind, August 31, 2007
This review is from: Lord Tyger (Hardcover)
You have to wonder why some publishers will print perverted trash like this and not publish good stories. This story is based on the premise that a demented man wants his son to be the next Tarzan, and so dumps him off in an African village, where he is adopted despite being white. He doesn't even bother to research the nature of the tribe when he does this. The tribe, being African Savages, are all sexual deviants who do nothing but engage in beastiality, pedophilia, and encourage their children to do the same. Naturally, he exceeds them all in this behavior, and when he discovers how he came to be there (he just happens to find a journal left by his father and is able to read it despite no education whatsoever), he decides to take revenge on the entire tribe that adopted him (although they treated him as their own) and kills all of them. Then he gets rescued and discovers that white women will put out for him even more readily than the tribeswomen.

Everything that is morbid is to be found here; the racism of the writer whose sick imagination assumes that any black tribe must be morally corrupt, when in fact many are more socially advanced than western culture, and certainly more advanced than the writer of this drek. There is nothing positive to be found here; rape, beastiality, graphic depictions of degradation of children as sex objects, murder, and sadism. It's caculatedly written to appeal to the worst of sadistic minds. I read it because a friend recommended it, and it made me wonder about his state of mind. This isn't a story about anything; it's the worst form of porn dressed up as a Tarzan story, and if Tarzan existed, the writer would be short-lived if the two ever met. Tarzan was a noble character, and his character is assassinated here by a writer who is anything but noble in his motivation or his attitude towards African "savages", i.e., indiginous tribes in Africa. Farmer, the author, in addition to his apparent cynicism towards his readers, reveals significant mental & emotional issues. My real problem is why any publisher would purchase and mass print a story about diseased and corrupt themes such as this. It belongs under the trash bin, not in it, along with the "writer" who produced it.
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1 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars What happened to the last review I wrote?, July 30, 2001
This review is from: Lord Tyger (Mass Market Paperback)
Hi,

I submitted a review for this book last month. Why wasn't it posted?

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Lord Tyger
Lord Tyger by Philip Jose Farmer (Mass Market Paperback - July 1, 1972)
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