American novelist, creator of the world famous character of Tarzan, one of the indispensable icons of popular
culture. Burroughs also published science fiction and crime novels, some 26 novels dealt with the Apeman. Critics
have considered Burroughs's fiction often crudely written and chauvinist. His books, however, are still widely
read and usually more interesting than the films. It is true that Burroughs often portrayed Africans, Arabs or
Asians as evil or comic, but the stories also contain several elements that have kept them 'politically correct':
Waziri warriors are brave, and his cave girl Nadara and Dejah Thoris, the princess of Mars, are courageous and
resourceful characters.
Edgar Rice Burroughs was born in Chicago, Illinois, into a prosperous family. His father, George Tyler Burroughs,
was a Civil War veteran. Burroughs attended several private schools, including the Michigan Military Academy,
Orchar Lake (1892-95), where he was instructor and assistant commandant (1895-96). He served in the 7th Cavalry
in the Arizona Territory (1896-97) and Illinois Reserve Militia (1918-19). After military career Burroughs was
owner of a stationery store in Pocatello, Idaho (1898), and associated with American Battery Company, Chicago
(1899-03). In 1900 he married Emma Centennia Hulbert (divorced in 1934); they had two sons and one daughter).
The next ten years the family lived near poverty. Burroughs was associated with Sweetser-Burroughs Mining Company
in Idaho (1903-04), a railroad policeman in Salt Lake, Utah (1904), a manager of stenographic department at Sears,
Roebuck and Company in Chicago (1906-08), a partner of an advertising agency (1908-09), an office manager (1909),
a partner of a sales firm (1910-11). In 1910-11 Burroughs worked for Champlain Yardley Company, and from 1912 to
1913 he was manager of System Service Bureau.
Before Tarzan Burroughs led a life full of failures. The turning point came when he started to write for pulps at
the age of 35 - firmly convinced that he could write as rotten stuff as published in pulp fiction magazines. His
first professional sale was Under the Moons of Mars, serialized in 1912 and introducing the popular invincible hero
John Carter, who is transported to Mars apparently by astral projection, following a battle with Apaches in Arizona.
The 'Martian' series eventually reached eleven books. Other popular series from Burroughs's pen were The Carson of
Venus books, blending romance and comedy, the Pellucidar tales, located inside the Earth, and The Land That Time
Forgot trilogy - totally some 68 titles.
Burroughs's first succesfull story was Dejah Thoris, Princess of Mars which appeared in 1912 in All-Story Magazine.
A few months later in 1912 appeared his breakthrough novel TARZAN OF THE APES, followed by 24 other Tarzan
adventures. ''If I had striven for long years of privation and effort to fit myself to become a writer,'' Burroughs
later told, ''I might be warranted in patting myself on the back, but God knows I did not work and still do not
understand how I happened to succeed.'' In 1913 Burroughs founded his own publishing house Edgar Rice Burroughs,
Inc. Burroughs-Tarzan Enterprises and Burroughs-Tarzan Pictures were founded in 1934.
In addition to his four major adventure series, Burroughs wrote between the years 1912 and 1933 several other
adventure novels, among them THE CAVE GIRL (1925), in which a weak aristocrat develops into a warrior, two Western
novels about a white Apache, THE WAR CHIEF (1927) and APACHE DEVIL (1933), showing sympathy for Native Americans,
and BEYOND THE FARTHEST STAR (1964), a science-fiction novel about the brutality of war. Burrough's science fiction
novels are full of sense of adventure, taking the reader on a fantastic voyage to chart strange and unfamiliar lands
like Homer did in his Odyssey. THE LAND THAT TIME FORGOT (1924) is a Darwinist story set on a mysterious island near
the South Pole, where dinosaurs and other primitive species have survived.
The Barsoom books were set on Mars. John Carter, the major hero, is transported to Barsoon by magical means.
Eventually he wins the hand of Princess Thoris. The Pellucidar series started from AT THE EARTH'S CORE (1922), in
which a group of scientist use their drilling machine to tunnel down into the hollow space at the centre of the
planet. Like in Jules Verne's A Journey to the Center of the Earth (1864) they find new life forms which have
survived for millions of years. Also Tarzan visits this subterranean world without time in TARZAN AT THE EARTH'S
CORE (1930). Burrough's created the Venus sequence, concerning the exploits of spaceman Carson Napier, relatively
late in his career, in the 1930s. PIRATES OF VENUS appeared in 1934 and the last book, ESCAPE ON VENUS, in 1946. A
posthumous story, 'Wizard of Venus', was published in 1964 and as the title story of THE WIZARD OF VENUS (1970).
In 1919 Burroughs purchased a large ranch in the San Fernando Valley, which he later developed into the suburb of
Tarzana. To pay his expensive lifestyle and to cover his misadventures in financial investments he wrote an average
of three novels a year. The first Tarzan film was produced in 1918, When the Olympic swimming champion Johnny
Weissmuller took the role in the 1930's, the films became really popular.
In 1933 Burroughs was elected mayor of California Beach. He married in 1935 Florence Dearholt (they divorced in
1942). During World War II Burroughs served at the age of 66 as a war correspondent in the South Pasific. He also
wrote columns ('Laugh It Off) for Honolulu Advertiser (1941-42, 1945). Burroughs died of a heart ailment on March
19, in 1950.
After Burroughs's death, enthusiasm for his books gradually waned. He once admitted to an interviewer: "I don't
think my work is 'literature', I'm not fooling myself about that." In 1960s Edgar Rice Burroughs Corporation
managed to arise a new interest in the author's work and his books have been since profitably in print. While
criticized as repetitious and clumsy, Burroughs's stories share the same colourful imagination familiar from the
classic works of H.G. Wells and H. Rider Haggard.