The Cave Girl Audio Book

The Cave Girl Audio BookThe Cave Girl Audio Book

The Cave Girl
Author: Edgar Rice Burroughs
Reader: Patrick G. Lawlor

Exciting adventure from the genius who gave us Tarzan. Back in Boston, he was a wimpy blueblood named Waldo Emerson Smith-Jones. But time, nature, and fate change him. Washed ashore on an uncharted South Pacific island, he sets off into the interior of the dark jungle and is attacked by a tribe of cliff dwellers and saved by a cave princess, Nadara.   ยป Read More


Available Audio Book Editions:

A1B467 UNABRIDGED Audio MP3-CD ( 1 )
Price: $24.95

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Publish Date: 06/01/2004
ISBN: 9780786184668
A7B483 Unabridged CDs (7) $56.00 $50.40 More Info >
A5B793 Unabridged Cassettes (5) $39.95 $35.95 More Info >

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Author Reader(s)
Edgar Rice Burroughs Patrick G. Lawlor
     


Author Bio:

Born to wealthy parents in 1875, Edgar Rice Burroughs attended private schools in the Chicago area, before going to Andover, Massachusetts for further education. Unfortunately, he was expelled and, after a brief stint at military school in Michigan, he joined the U.S. Cavalry, stationed in Arizona. He began writing when he was 35, with his first story, "Under the Moons of Mars", appearing in 1911 under the pseudonym Norman Bean. This story, which became the basis for his novel A PRINCESS OF MARS, introduced the character of John Carter, a man who, while in an Arizona cave, discovers a gateway to the planet Mars. This character went on to appear in a series of books, and became one of the most well-known figures in science fiction. But it was Burroughs's next creation that would truly change his life. In 1912 he wrote TARZAN OF THE APES, the first in what would eventually stretch to a series of 24 books (not counting those written by other authors). In 1912, Burroughs moved to Los Angeles to oversee the production of the first film version of TARZAN and he remained there for most of the rest of his life. During World War II, the 66-year-old Burroughs worked for the Los Angles Times, becoming the oldest reporter in the Pacific Theater. Tarzan had made him rich, and he was able to buy a large amount of property in Los Angeles County, which is still called Tarzana. Critical opinion of his writing is generally negative; it is often considered excessively crude and it suffers greatly from then-current opinions about native peoples. Nevertheless, Burroughs's books have been enormously influential in science fantasy circles--especially in regard to their notions of the Hero--and have always been popular, with nearly all of them remaining in print in some form or another. And with over 70 films based on Tarzan, and more being made all the time, it seems likely that the works of Edgar Rice Burroughs will continue to be popular well into the future.


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