It is a weird coincidence that many of
the stories I've read on my journey into pulp literature were
published in the pages of Argosy.
True, much of it comes from the fact that I've been reading a lot of
Burroughs & Merritt over the last year (who are giants of the
era), but when it comes to discussion of pulp magazines themselves,
Argosy in the 10s and 20s doesn't get as much mention in my Pulp Revolution running
crew as Weird Tales or
Astounding, or even
the later Analog and
Planet Stories. I'd
guess because it lacks a strong editorial personality like Farnsworth
Wright, Hugo Gernsback or John W. Campbell. Just an observation.
Otis
Adelbert Kline (1891-1946) was a pulp author closely associated with
Weird Tales, with his
first published story appearing in that magazine's first issue in
1923. An assistant editor and regular story contributor to Weird
Tales, he would also find
success with Argosy
before becoming a literary agent. His most famous client? Robert E.
Howard.
The Planet of Peril
is the first of Kline's Venus stories, planetary romance
swashbucklers in the same vein as Edgar Rice Burroughs' Barsoom
series. It was first serialized in Argosy All-Story Weekly
in 1929 and published as a novel that same year. Here, Robert Grandon
is a WWI veteran who's bored with the modern world when he's
approached by a Dr. Morgan who offers him a route to adventure and
excitement. Grandon agrees and through a process of hypnosis Dr.
Morgan sends Grandon's mind across space and
time to Venus, where he mentally swaps places with the lost Prince of
Uxpo. Awakening as a slave of the fearsome kingdom of Reabon, Grandon
wastes no time in leading a prisoners' revolt and running into the
deadly jungles of Zarovia (the locals' name for Venus).
Through
various happenstances, he rescues Queen Vernia of Reabon, a
commanding woman of action who was responsible for imprisoning
Grandon's body before he arrived. Proud,haughty and beautiful, Grandon
naturally falls in love with her, and the two travel across Venus to
get her back to Reabon within a year or else her political rivals
will usurp her throne because of byzantine Zarovian laws.
This
is an obvious imitation of John Carter, aimed at fans of that series
(which is probably why Argosy
picked it up. Burroughs got his start in their pages with A
Princess of Mars and Tarzan).
The story moves at a fast clip. Perhaps too fast, at times. When
Grandon rescues Vernia from a giant monster threatening to eat her,
its built up as a great threat, and Grandon quickly dispatches it.
This happens semi-regularly throughout the book. The sabit sequence
is satisfying because it takes a little more time, starting with the
horrors of people being forced into communal living conditions (even
being unable to choose who they mate with) against their will and
ending in a titanic battle where thousands of the giant ants are
killed in the revolt.
Its
got action, adventure, and romance aplenty, though the quality isn't
as high as Burroughs. There's a few pieces of convenient deus
ex machina plot resolutions here
and there, but even so, its great fun when carnivorous bird-men are
being gunned down from an airship over a lake made of lava. Vernia is
an amazingly strong female character, just a few steps shy of Dejah
Thoris. I do recommend it, though in a “If you enjoyed A
Princess of Mars, then you'll
enjoy this” sort of way.
2 comments:
I like what I've read of Kline's. I do wish this book was easier to find in print, though. The second and third look to be much easier to find for whatever reason. The third ran in Weird Tales, too!
Fortunately, Kindle editions are dirt cheap.
Kline's an interesting figure, and at some point I'll have to touch on the Burroughs-Kline War that was apparently completely made up by Wollheim.
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