Tarzan and the City of Gold

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Tarzan and the City of Gold
Tarzan and the city of gold.jpg
Dust-jacket illustration of Tarzan and the City of Gold
Author Edgar Rice Burroughs
Illustrator J. Allen St. John
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
SeriesTarzan series
Genre Adventure
Publisher Edgar Rice Burroughs, Inc.
Publication date
1932
Media typePrint (hardback)
Pages316
Preceded by Tarzan Triumphant  
Followed by Tarzan and the Lion Man  

Tarzan and the City of Gold is a novel by American writer Edgar Rice Burroughs, the sixteenth in his series of twenty-four books about the title character Tarzan. The novel was originally serialized in the magazine Argosy from March through April 1932. [1]

Contents

Plot summary

Tarzan rescues a warrior from a group of bandits known as shiftas, and learns that he is Valthor, a warrior of the lost city of Athne, the City of Ivory and capital of the land of Thenar. Tarzan is then captured by the insane yet beautiful queen Nemone of its hereditary enemy, Cathne, the City of Gold, capital of the land of Onthar. This novel is perhaps best known for two scenes; in the first, Tarzan is forced to fight Cathne's strongest man Phobeg in its arena. While an ordinary man might have been in trouble, Tarzan easily overpowers Phobeg.

The second scene, in which Tarzan is forced to fight a lion, starts with the ape man being forced to run away from a hunting lion, Belthar, which will hunt him down and kill him. Tarzan at first believes he can outrun the beast (lions tire after the first 100 yards at top speed). This lion, however, is of a breed specifically selected for endurance, and ultimately Tarzan must turn to face him, though aware that without a knife he can do little but delay the inevitable. His own lion ally, Jad-bal-ja, whom he had raised from a cub, arrives and intervenes, killing Belthar and saving Tarzan. Nemone, who believes her life is linked to that of her pet, kills herself when it dies.

Unusually for lost cities in Burroughs' Tarzan series, which are typically visited but once, Cathne and Athne reappear in a later Tarzan adventure, Tarzan the Magnificent . (The only other lost city that Tarzan visits more than once is Opar, which appears in four novels and is referenced in a juvenile story).

Comic adaptations

The book has been adapted into comic form by Gold Key Comics in Tarzan nos. 186-187, dated June–July 1970, with a script by Gaylord DuBois and art by Doug Wildey.

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References

  1. Bleiler, Everett (1948). The Checklist of Fantastic Literature . Chicago: Shasta Publishers. pp.  67.
Preceded by Tarzan series
Tarzan and the City of Gold
Succeeded by