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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars ERB's hero Carson Napier aims for Mars, lands on Venus...
Originally serialized in "Argosy" in 1932, "Pirates of Venus" is the first story in the fourth longest series of pulp fiction adventures written by Edgar Rice Burroughs (Tarzan is the longest, with Mars and Pellucidar coming in second and third). The authorial conceit this time around is that Carson Napier visits ERB before heading off to Guadalupe...
Published on August 4, 2004 by Lawrance M. Bernabo

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12 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars The weakest Burroughs series, but interesting nonetheless
"Pirates of Venus" begins the last major series by Edgar Rice Burroughs: the Venus novels. When it first appeared as a serial in the pulp magazine Argosy in 1932, Burroughs had already written Tarzan novels, most of the Mars series, and the novels of Pellucidar. The Venus novels were created partially as a response to Otis Adelbert Kline, a pulp author who wrote...
Published on July 18, 2004 by Claude Avary


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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars ERB's hero Carson Napier aims for Mars, lands on Venus..., August 4, 2004
This review is from: Pirates Of Venus (Paperback)
Originally serialized in "Argosy" in 1932, "Pirates of Venus" is the first story in the fourth longest series of pulp fiction adventures written by Edgar Rice Burroughs (Tarzan is the longest, with Mars and Pellucidar coming in second and third). The authorial conceit this time around is that Carson Napier visits ERB before heading off to Guadalupe Island where he has a rocket ship in which he intends to travel to Mars. Carson establishes a telepathic link with Burroughs, which will allow him to communicate his adventures from afar. This becomes helpful, especially when Carson's rocket ship takes off for Mars and the adventurer discovers that he forgot something: namely the gravitational effects of the moon. However, in one of the great strokes of luck in science fiction history this ends up sending Carson and his rocket ship to Venus instead. The planet is said to be uninhabitable, but Carson has no other choice and when the rocket enters the dense atmosphere he jumps out in a parachute. Carson's luck continues because the air is indeed breathable and soon he is having a series of adventures on the planet's surface and meets up with the beautiful Duare. If you have read a lot of ERB's novels you know two things are going to happen between these two, namely that he will fall in love with her and at the end of the novel they will be separated by tragic circumstances (to be continued).

"Pirates of Venus" is a straightforward ERB adventure on one level, but you can also read it as a thinly disguised political satire aimed at the communists. This would be the bit about the Thorists, who start a revolution for their own benefit in which they cheat the uneducated masses, kill or drive off the educated people, and are themselves pretty much just a collection of idiots (I did not say it was profound political satire on the level of George Orwell). As an adventure yarn this is one of ERB's better stories from the decade of the 1930s and in it you will find a strange world of amazing landscapes, fantastic creatures, and people with bizarre customs. The adventure elements are from Burroughs' well developed formula, so you might as well pay attention to the wonderful world of Amtor he has created. Still, special mention has to be made of Carson Napier having more of a sense of humor than Tarazn, John Carter, and David Innes put together (my favorite is his definition of "golf" as "a mental disease").

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12 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars The weakest Burroughs series, but interesting nonetheless, July 18, 2004
"Pirates of Venus" begins the last major series by Edgar Rice Burroughs: the Venus novels. When it first appeared as a serial in the pulp magazine Argosy in 1932, Burroughs had already written Tarzan novels, most of the Mars series, and the novels of Pellucidar. The Venus novels were created partially as a response to Otis Adelbert Kline, a pulp author who wrote very much in the style of Burroughs. When Kline created a series of Venus-set novels made to imitate Burroughs's Martian novels, Burroughs fired back with his own series on Venus. He created a new hero, Carson Napier, who somehow manages to fire his rocket at Mars and end up landing on Venus. A jungle planet with tree-living humanoids battling a tyranny attempting to erase all class boundaries called 'The Thorists' (rather thinly disguised communists) and a horde of other monstrous menaces. Napier joins the fight against the Thorists and tries romancing the beautiful but unobtainable Duare.

It sounds like a typical Burrough adventure: plenty of colorful action, monsters, weird science, and crazy new cultures. But Burroughs was past his creative prime, and "Pirates of Venus" shows it. Phillip R. Burger, in his interesting afterword to this edition, sums up the problems in two telling sentences: "In the pantheon of Burroughs heroes, Carson Napier is considered a tad deficient." "I've become rather fond of 'Pirates of Venus' as well, in spite of the novel's rather glaring fault: no plot." Although Burger makes a spirited attempt to explain his liking for the novel, he's right about the flaws. Napier is a weak hero who doesn't really have any plan or direction, and the novel is really a loosely collected series of escapades and fights that lead nowhere in particular. The novel hardly even ends; it just stops -- setting up the inevitable sequels (which, for the record, are "Escape on Venus," "Lost on Venus," and "Carson of Venus"). Napier is maybe a more modern, realistic hero than Tarzan or John Carter of Mars, but that's not exactly what you want from an Edgar Rice Burroughs novel.

Nonetheless, "Pirates of Venus" is quintessential reading for Burroughs fans and pulp lovers. This excellent edition from Bison Books, complete with new illustrations, a glossary, and great essays from F. Paul Wilson and Phillip Burger, is the first time the book has been back in print for many years; many Burroughs readers probably haven't had a chance to experience Burroughs's last series, and here it is in quite handsome form. And, despite all its shortcomings, "Pirates of Venus" does offer simple action and adventure entertainment. Newcomers to Burroughs should first experience "Tarzan of the Apes," "Under the Moons of Mars" (a current volume from Bison Books that collects the first three Mars novels), "At the Earth's Core," and "The Land That Time Forgot" (all in print) before reading this later and lesser work from the creator of the modern action/adventure novel.

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5 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars My Favorite Burroughs, May 17, 2002
By 
Herbert H. Nowell (College Station, CT) - See all my reviews
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Carson Napier has been my favorite Burroughs hero from about page 25 of my very old paperback copy of this book. He has all the heroic charms of John Carter while not quite being as over the top as the Warlord of Mars.

For plotting this book is stock Burroughs and his many imitators. If you loved John Carter try his not quite so wonderful brother. If you love the Green Star novels read the originals (much as the Calisto books are Carter's version of Barsoom so is Green Star Carter's version of Amtor). If you love Norman's Gor, Aker's Antares, or Carter's Calisto then do yourself a favor and read the lesser know inspiration for them.

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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Burroughs at his swashbuckling best, April 19, 2008
Carson Napier sets out to test his new rocket - and what better test than a quick trip to Mars, just to shake the bugs out? Off he goes, but realizes too late that he forgot something important: the moon! Can hardly blame the guy. He had a lot on his mind, so it was easy to skip a little thing like a planetoid 2000 miles in diameter. So, instead of flying towards Mars, away from the sun, he makes a gravity-slung U turn, towards certain death by solar incineration. Then, by remarkable coincidence, Venus just happens to be in the exact spot along its 400 million mile orbital path to draw his ship in - mighty convenient, that.

That sets the mood for another story cast in the classic Burroughs mold. It features the manly questing, swords and ray guns, bumbling romance (resolved in the end, of course), treachery, lower races conveniently available as domestic help, and repeated rescues of the princess who repeatedly needs rescuing. Oh, and pirates. The real yo-ho-ho and prepare-to-be-boarded kind.

If you want chaste adventure and escapist fantasy, Burroughs delivers. Where else could you hope to find this kind of writing: "As a mistress, death seemed sadly lacking in many essentials. Therefore, I decided not to die." They just don't write like that any more - and it might be a good thing, too.

-- wiredweird
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6 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars the best book ever, December 31, 2001
By 
"sex_machine" (toronto,ontario) - See all my reviews
i loved this book the first chpter was really slow but it picked up on the second, after the scond chapter i was hooked i couldn't put it down i had to know what happed so i ended up reading the whole thing in like a week and this is a big book
i loved every chapter every page ,every thing my favorite part is when the man found his love but he could not see because she was a princes, and how he found his beutiful princes and told how much he loved her, but she could not love him back,but i can't tell you the whole story but there is lot's of battling and alien thing, and if i had any money i would buy my own copy it's so good i just keep reading it over and over.BUY IT
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5.0 out of 5 stars Carson Napier adventure, April 6, 2010
Another Carson Napier adventure by Burroughs. Napier is on his way to the Mars, but his ship lands on cloud covered Venus instead. He found trees so large that cities were built upon their branches. Monsters, humans, oceans dotted with islands, it was a wild an uncivilized place. Great science fiction adventure story.
Really nice cover art from Roy Krenkel Jr.
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3.0 out of 5 stars An imagination that never stops, December 12, 2008
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Although not as good as ERB's John Carter, Warlord of Mars series, this book is very imaginative and entertaining. I am amazed at how ERB takes the science of the time and extrapolates onto other planets.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Classic Burroughs, January 2, 2008
Classic Burroughs. "Carson Napier is bound for Mars, but finds himself forced to crash land on the planet Venus instead." Id f you are not already hooked, then you are not a Burroughs fan!
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3 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Welcome to Amtor, February 28, 2004
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David Bonesteel (Fresno, CA United States) - See all my reviews
(VINE VOICE)    (REAL NAME)   
The plot is vintage (cliché?) Burroughs-stalwart Earthman finds himself alone on an alien world, rescues a beautiful princess, wins her love, and becomes the ruler of a mighty empire. Although there is nothing new in the plot, ERB at his best has a way of writing a tale that just zings along from adventure to adventure in a very enjoyable way, making for fast, fun, escapist reading. This is the literary equivalent of comfort food.
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1 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars In Defense of Carson Napier, June 27, 2006
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This was the first book in Edgar Rice Burroughs' "Carson of Venus" series. It was the last major series that ERB created, 20 years after he created "John Carter of Mars". In this book, Carson Napier builds a rocketship and sets out for Mars, but ends up on Venus. He has a series of episodic adventures, and falls in love with a beautiful princess along the way (which happens in just about every ERB book). Fun stuff, if you are a fan of this sort of thing.
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Pirates of Venus
Pirates of Venus by Edgar R. Burroughs (Paperback - June 16, 2009)
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