Poster Shopping Mall

Poster Subjects 
Main Menu

Abstract
Animals
Architecture
Artists
Astronomy & Space
Botanical
Cars
Christianity
Comic Book
Cuisine
Education
Fantasy
Holidays
Home & Hearth
Humor
Maps
Movies
Music
Patriotic
People
Places
Scenic
Sports
Still Life
Television
Transportation
Vintage
World Culture
Youth

Funny Pics and Poster Parodies

 
 

Gifts and Collectibles

other great Links

 

Tarzan of the Apes (Signet Classics) Posters Photos Art
Search for Posters Art Prints, photos and get results from all the many categories from Amazon including books, videos, dvds, toys, video games, and more.  

Posters Art Prints Photos collectables

If for some reason you can't find what the poster or art print your looking for try using the search boxes below

Find Movie Posters at MovieGoodsMovieGoods


Tarzan of the Apes (Signet Classics) Books
Amazon Products

In association with Amazon.com

 


Amazon.com's Price: $4.95
Prices subject to change.



Availability: Usually ships in 1 to 3 weeks

Buy Now!



Binding: Paperback
Dewey Decimal Number: 813.52
EAN: 9780451524232
ISBN: 0451524233
Label: Signet Classics
Manufacturer: Signet Classics
Number Of Items: 1
Number Of Pages: 288
Publication Date: March 06, 1990
Publisher: Signet Classics
Sales Rank: 292818
Studio: Signet Classics




Related Items: Browse for similar items by category:


Editorial Review:

Product Description:
Set amids the vibrant colors and sounds of the savage African jungle, this classic work, rich in suspense and action, has beckoned generations of readers on a journey to romance and adventure. An exhilarating work that takes readers to that faraway place in their minds where dreams prevail.

Amazon.com Review:
First published in 1914, Edgar Rice Burroughs's romance has lost little of its force over the years--as film revivals and TV series well attest. Tarzan of the Apes is very much a product of its age: replete with bloodthirsty natives and a bulky, swooning American Negress, and haunted by what zoo specialists now call charismatic megafauna (great beasts snarling, roaring, and stalking, most of whom would be out of place in a real African jungle). Burroughs countervails such incorrectness, however, with some rather unattractive representations of white civilization--mutinous, murderous sailors, effete aristos, self-involved academics, and hard-hearted cowards. At Tarzan's heart rightly lies the resourceful and hunky title character, a man increasingly torn between the civil and the savage, for whom cutlery will never be less than a nightmare.

The passages in which the nut-brown boy teaches himself to read and write are masterly and among the book's improbable, imaginative best. How tempting it is to adopt the ten-year-old's term for letters--"little bugs"! And the older Tarzan's realization that civilized "men were indeed more foolish and more cruel than the beasts of the jungle," while not exactly a new notion, is nonetheless potent. The first in Burroughs's serial is most enjoyable in its resounding oddities of word and thought, including the unforgettable "When Tarzan killed he more often smiled than scowled; and smiles are the foundation of beauty."



Customer Reviews
Average Rating:  out of 5 stars

Rating: 5 out of 5 stars - Tarzan of the Apes
very good book it took
me there days to read it.
the writing is very good
but it leaves you asking
queszions about Jane and Tarzan,
are they going to leave together
or Jane going to marry the other
guy Claton?

but it is a good boook



Rating: 4 out of 5 stars - Tarzan of the Apes
The shipment was very fast. I appreciated receiving the book so quickly. It was rated as in very good condition, however, I think the rating should have been fair or good.



Rating: 4 out of 5 stars - Tarzan of the Apes
This book has action, excitement, drama, suspense, and unfortunately racism. Edgar Rice Burroughs clearly wrote to a white, male audience with this book, which in 1914 when it was first published was likely the case. Tarzan is that primordial man with no obligations but to himself who somehow teaches himself to write while also teaching himself to be the most cunning entity in the jungle. He can read and write and then go kill an ape or lion on his way home. What a guy.

The fact ... Read More



Rating: 5 out of 5 stars - Loved it but for one major flaw and a few minor ones.
I can forgive some of the unrealistic things as well as the multiple coincidences, but I cannot reconcile how Tarzan, who knew how to read and write, but not yet how to speak, could sign his own name on a love note to Jane.

He had never learned pronunciation of letters and words, so it would be IMPOSSIBLE for him to have signed his name.



Rating: 3 out of 5 stars - A True Classic, But...
What more can we say of Tarzan of the Apes - he truly is an American original, and has influenced characters in film, television and comic books from the Beastmaster to Sheena to Ka-Zar and beyond, as well as standing as a popular culture phenomenon in his own right. We always think we know the whole story - a man raise din the jungle, befriended by animals, fighting whatever danger comes at him with his Girl Friday, Jane, at his side. However, if we return to the original novel, we find a more complex ... Read More





 



Search:

 

Find your favorite art:

barewalls.com