We both had to smile at the use of my royal title, yet I was indeed still "Emperor of Pellucidar," and some day I meant to rebuild what the vile act of the treacherous Hooja had torn down.
But first I would find my empress. To me she was worth forty empires.
The first sequel to At the Earth's Core, Pellucidar, appeared as a serial in five installments in All Story Cavalier Weekly in 1915. The cover painting of the issue with the first episode almost looks like a repainted crop or detail of the painting used to advertise episode #1 of At the Earth's Core a year before. An interesting choice, I guess meant to catch the eye of the drug store customer who recalled fondly the first Pellucidar adventure, or perhaps suggesting a pretty woman's face was thought to sell more copies than the body of a muscleman, the bulk of a brontosaurus, a terrifying pterosaur or a roaring sabre-toothed tiger. Later printings of the book are actually more indicative of the novel's distinctive content and feature such dangerous beasts. Not long ago, at the same antique store where I spotted a Paperbacks From Hell bargain which I took a pass on, I purchased an Ace edition of Pellucidar with a great Frank Frazetta cover and that is what I will be reading today.* The image gracing this 1978 Ace paperback, sometimes known as Flying Reptiles, is one of my favorite Frazetta works, and within my breast resides a dear hope that the people at Frazetta Girls will one day put out a 1000-piece jigsaw puzzle of this painting for me to hang up next to my beloved 1000-piece Vampirella jigsaw puzzle.
*Alas, this thing is full of typos and errors like "sate" for "state" and "described" for "descried" and "purpose" for "propose" which did not appear in a scan of a 1955 British edition I consulted. For shame, Ace!
In the prologue to Pellucidar, an amazing coincidence leads to the discovery of a telegraph line buried in the African desert. The main text of the novels is a transcript of the Morse code signals that come through this device, transmitted to the surface from the inner world of Pellucidar by David Innes, who is the primary narrator of the novel, as he was of its predecessor.
As the main text begins, Innes travels to Pellucidar in his iron mole, which he has packed full of books, firearms and ammo; he arrives in that strange inner world he knows not where. Amazingly, after marching around for a while, shooting the native wildlife for food and admiring the scenery (like Tarzan and John Carter, Innes has come to love the alien milieu to which he arrived through an unlikely series of events, even the inhabitants of this bizarre world are always trying to enslave or kill him), the first human being Innes runs into is his pal, elderly scientist and fellow American, Perry.You'll remember from At the Earth's Core that, on his first trip to Pellucidar, Innes was accompanied by Perry. Innes won the heart of the beautiful native Dian while Innes and Perry made progress in the grand project of uniting all of Pellucidar's primitive human tribes under an empire, the emperor of which was Innes himself, and equipping Innes' loyal subjects with superior weapons, like swords and archery, in hopes of liberating the human race of this inner world from the cruel domination of the diabolical matriarchal pterosaurs known as the Mahar and their brutal lackeys, the gorilla men known as the Sagoth. Perry has some bad news for Innes. Thanks to the machinations of the tricky Hooja, a human who himself covets the princess Dian, the human tribes are again in conflict and the Mahar and Sagoths have been giving homo sapiens a right thrashing! Dian, whom Perry has not seen in ages, even doubts Innes' love for her!
Our ambitious American heroes set out to find Dian and rebuild Innes' empire. On the way to the most loyal of the many human kingdoms which had pledged loyalty to Innes, they have many adventures, blasting many huge mammals with their rifles, making fur coats so they can cross a snowy mountain range, building a boat so they can cross an ocean infested with icthyosaurs and plesiosaurs. They meet up with a tribe of humans who are friends of Innes but not part of his anti-Mahar empire yet--these humans have a trade relationship with the Mahars. A bunch of these people go back to the iron mole with Perry to collect the invaluable equipment and supplies Innes has brought, while another bunch of them accompany Innes on his trip towards the heart of his empire. Innes' party runs into trouble--Sagoths take them by surprise and Innes is dragged to the Mahar city where he was a slave during his first trip down here!
There are no extant male Mahars and this reptilian race of man-eating scientists reproduces itself via an arcane process of fertilizing their eggs after they have been laid. These foolish females have only one copy of the fertilizer formula, and in At the Earth's Core Innes stole that book and hid it. The Mahars demand Innes reveal the location of their guide to sexless reproduction, without which the Mahars will go extinct. Innes refuses and is thrown in the arena.Amazingly, another human captive is thrown in the arena at the same time--Innes' wife and empress, the princess Dian! One third of the way through the book, these lovebirds are reunited. Also amazingly, an influential Mahar whom Innes did a good turn arrives in town during the gladiatorial games and when she sees Innes down there about to be eaten by a sabre-toothed tiger, she has the ferocious feline carried from the arena by three of the animal-level intelligence pterosaurs who serve as the Mahar leadership's bodyguard.
The Mahars give Innes another chance to earn his freedom by returning the book. He is inclined to refuse again, but Dian is a smart cookie with a deep faith in her husband and in the modern technology of the surface people which she has heard about from hubby and Perry. Dian explains to Innes that it doesn't matter if the Mahars regain the ability to reproduce--if Innes is free to unite the humans of Pellucidar and teach them how to use modern technology, no number of cold-blooded psychic rhamphorynchazoid bitches will be able to withstand the attack of homo sapiens Pellucidaris! While if Innes remains shut up in this Mahar city, the disorganized human tribes won't be able to hold their own stand against even the current number of Mahars. Like every good husband, Innes admits his wife is right and takes her advice, agreeing to go get the book in return for his and Dian's freedom--of course, until the book is returned, Dian will be a hostage among the Mahars.
(One of the interesting thing in the first two Pellucidar books is how the Mahars initially view the humans as mere cattle and we humans get the idea the Mahars are totally evil monsters, but, as things progress, the Mahars begin to realize that the humans are reasoning beings and Innes and we readers get a sense that maybe the Mahars can be trusted to keep their word.)
When Innes reaches the cave where he hid the book he finds it is absent! When he gets back to the Mahar city, he learns that somebody purporting to be his agent, now long gone, has already delivered the book to the matriarchal flying reptiles and the Mahars in return surrendered Dian into this joker's custody. It was the crafty Hooja, who figured out where the book was and has again separated Innes from his lady love!Innes sets off after Hooja and Dian through the land of shadow. You see, suspended in the air at the center of the Earth is something like a sun which warms and illuminates the inner surface of the Earth's crust upon which all the people and beasts of Pellucidar tread. Hanging a mile above this surface, rotating but never changing its position, is a sort of planet or moon, a huge sphere with its own hills and valleys and so forth, and its own gravitational pull. This moon casts a shadow on the surface of Pellucidar that never moves. Within this shadow, where plants grow far less robustly, there is a kingdom of humans who use diplodocus as beasts of burden, Thuria; the Thurians have expressed an interest in joining or allying with Innes' empire, seeing as they have long been subject to the oppression of a nearby Mahar city, and recently been attacked by a newly founded kingdom based on an island just outside the shadow, a kingdom that is allied with the Mahars and employs many Sagoth soldiers--the kingdom ruled by Hooja!
(Hooja as a recurring character really adds something to these Pellucidar books, even though his death is underwhelming, he being among those drowned as a boat sinks, instead of dying in a showdown with Innes or Dian. Of course, maybe this means he can reappear in a later book--cross your fingers, Hooja fans!)
On his way to Thuria and then Hooja's island, Innes has some good adventures, some of the best scenes of the book. Among these capers is his taming of a hyaenadon; it is good Innes has this monstrous dog fighting by his side, because while he is sleeping somebody steals his revolvers and his rifle. The hyaenadon also provides Burroughs a chance to give Innes more of an inner life with his descriptions of how the man loves dogs. The thieves also stole the token Innes bears that proves his identity as Emperor, and the lack of it gets him accused by the Thurians of being an agent of Hooja. Oops! So, instead of being at the head of a Thurian army, Innes sets off for Hooja's island kingdom in hopes of rescuing Dian all by his lonesome.
His dog having left him, Innes is quickly captured by the natives of the island, seven-foot-tall farmers, sort of half human, have beast types. These peaceful giants are the first farmers Innes has met in Pellucidar. The beastmen hate Hooja and his invaders, and Innes tries to get them to join forces with him in a war on Hooja, but they figure Innes is Hooja's spy and put him to work in the melon patch. One of Burroughs' jokes here in Pellucidar is that the beastmen tell Innes he will be executed when the melons are harvested, so Innes tries to delay the harvest, fostering the growth of weeds.A force of Hooja's men and Sagoths attacks the beastmen's settlement, and the beastmen realize Innes really is their friend when he shows them how to drive off the attackers. Innes is freed and guided to Hooja's HQ. The first person he meets there is a human whose village Hooja's thugs took over, a man who is in league against Hooja with none other than Dian, who, though a captive herself, helped this guy to escape Hooja's dungeon.
Again we see that Dian is very brave and very capable. You sometimes hear people moan that women in old SF stories are mere damsels in distress who need rescuing, but when I read old SF books I often encounter women like Dian who are clever and brave and resourceful. A more sensical feminist complaint is that immortalized in the Brueghel Test: resourceful women in old genre fiction generally employ their abilities and demonstrate strength of will not by pursuing some peculiar personal interest of their own, or fighting to improve the condition of their sex or social justice more broadly, but in trying to build or preserve a relationship with a man, the good characters making sacrifices and taking risks to protect a man's life and freedom, the villainous female characters trying to manipulate and dominate men.
Anyway, this guy directs Innes to where Dian is being held, and there are good fight scenes and action scenes as Innes, Dian and their pal escape Hooja's thugs...only to be captured by Hooja's lackeys again. Luckily a page later the beastmen farmers rescue them. Then somebody on a diplodocus kidnaps Dian, but Innes' pet hyaenadon returns and makes possible the rescue of Dian. All these action scenes are individually entertaining, but their impact is somewhat lessened by the fact that after one of our guys performs prodigies of valor and benefits from astounding pieces of luck he or she will just get captured all over again.The last two chapters of Pellucidar tell the story of the big naval battle between Hooja's primitive fleet of little boats and the fleet of feluccas equipped with lateen sails and black powder artillery that Perry has constructed off screen and, after Hooja's defeat, how Innes and Perry set up their empire, uniting humanity and friendly non-humans into a federation of kingdoms, seizing all the Mahar cities and driving the matriarchal pterosaur-women off to uncharted territory, establishing an economic system based on barter--no money or resales allowed!--teaching the savage Pellucidarians about mercy, and so on. This material is kind of utopian and appears in summary form rather than dramatic form, and also reminds us of how John Carter made himself Warlord of Mars and taught the people of Barsoom how to better behave. Like his Barsoom and Africa stories, Burroughs' Pellucidar stories both celebrate white imperialism and the alleged noble aspects of the "close to nature" lives of barbarians, savages and animals. We might roll our eyes at this effort to have your cake and eat it too, or, more sympathetically, suggest Burroughs is presenting a utopian synthesis of what is good about modern Western civilization with what is (supposedly) good about life in environments and societies that are more "natural" and less "artificial."
I enjoyed Pellucidar and of course recommend it. This sequel differs in tone from At the Earth's Core, being much more optimistic and positive. I've noted above how the Mahars are a little more sympathetic, the scenes about the wonderful relationship between people and dogs, and the presence of pacific non-human farmers, and the novel's happy ending in which a just society with no money is created in Pellucidar by Innes and Perry. Again and again Innes and Perry develop healthy and productive relationships with animals and people, relationships which are complementary and foster personal growth in the individuals within the relationships and positive change in the world beyond the relationship. Another way Pellucidar is "lighter" than At the Earth's Core is its relative lack of horror elements; At the Earth's Core was full of scenes in which people and animals were tortured, dismembered, or lost eyes, and there is very little of that in Pellucidar; though people in the thousands get killed in the wars and fights it depicts, the gore element is much reduced.A good adventure story with some utopian elements. There are a bunch more Pellucidar books and I'll be reading more of them in the near future, but first we'll be back to reading short stories that have been anthologized and thus, presumably, represent above average specimens plucked from the vast sea of 20th-century genre fiction.
























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