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Zorro

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This adaptation of the 1950s Walt Disney television series ZORRO, featuring the character created by Johnston McCulley, tells of Zorro's origins and his battle of wits and swords with the corrupt comandante Capitan Monastario.

174 pages, Hardcover

First published January 1, 1958

53 people want to read

About the author

Steve Frazee

108 books5 followers
Steve Frazee was born in Salida, Colorado. He began making major contributions to Western pulp magazines with stories set in the American West as well as a number of North-Western tales published in Adventure. Not surprisingly, many of Frazee's novels have become major motion pictures.

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5 stars
13 (18%)
4 stars
30 (43%)
3 stars
21 (30%)
2 stars
5 (7%)
1 star
0 (0%)
Displaying 1 - 14 of 14 reviews
1 review
September 11, 2014
I read Zorro the WaltDisney version. In the book a young man named Diego was away from for a long time and
was returning home when someone took over his home and started to tax people and if they didn't listen, they
would be killed or put in jail. Young Diego also had a friend that traveled with on his journey his name was Bernardo but at the beginig they called him a servant but as the story went on he became a very close friend of both Zorro and Diego. So as Diego found about the ruler he was very upset about and thats when he decided to take his home back in the name of the people so when got to his house he showed Bernardo the hidden passage to a cave that his grandfather showed and so thats where he would operate as Zorro and ride off with his horse Tornado. So after all I think this book really inspired me to fight for whats right like what Zorro did. Walt Disney Company
Profile Image for Patrick.
140 reviews
March 19, 2020
This book starts out on a ship with Dom Diego de la Vega returning home from Spain at the request of his father. He learns from his fight masters that things are not going well in his hometown of Los Angeles. Since he has been gone for several years, a man named Monastario had been put in charge of the pueblo (Los Angeles). When he gets home, he makes a plan with his faithful servant Bernado to stop Monastario. He decides that as Diego, he will be very estudious, clumsy, and kinda shies away from any fight. But this is just a facade to hide his true plans. In reality, he had become a master swordsman and was a very accomplished rider of a horse. Throughout the book, Diego, as Zorro, attempts to bring justice back to Los Angeles. The question becomes: can he do it without being without being caught or brought under suspicion? I have always loved this story and I give it 5 stars.
Profile Image for John Peel.
Author 350 books166 followers
January 20, 2018
A novelization based on the Disney TV series "Zorro", this book is adapted from the first 13 episodes of season 1. It's a fun romp, and Steve Frazee has a good time with it. California in 1820 is under Spanish rule, and the new military commander of Los Angeles is a nasty, greedy man who bends the law to enrich himself. Don Diego de la Vega plays the scholar and fop to hide his activities as Zorro - the Fox! Enjoy!
Profile Image for Sandi.
1,644 reviews48 followers
October 17, 2012
This was a book I inherited from my Dad and read until the cover fell off. I never watched the TV series that the book was based on but that did not diminish my enjoyment of the story.
Profile Image for Hugh Atkins.
400 reviews
August 10, 2025
I started collecting these Whitman Classics. I love their design and appearance. I’m collecting these ones from the ‘50s and ‘60s that have the slick, shiny covers, not the older ones with the traditional paper book jackets (although I have a couple of those as well). I really like what Whitman was doing—publishing classic books and marketing them to young readers to encourage them to read. I am reading the books I collect, if I haven’t already read them. This Zorro book was a typical Zorro adventure, much like an episode of the old television show might have been.
Profile Image for Vanessa Dargain.
237 reviews5 followers
February 9, 2018
As a one man army Don Diego de la Vega uses optical illusion , deception and good swordsmanship to
end King Ferdinand's VII cruel appointee's ( commandante Monastario ) control over pueblo nuestra de la reina in southern California during 1820 .
82 reviews
November 22, 2024
It's a children's adaptation of a Zorro tv show. That being said, it's a fun story. Much of it was pretty obviously just retelling of episodes, especially some of the fight scenes. However, it was still a fun read. Not great literature, but fun action reading. Now i need to go practice fencing.
Profile Image for Alena.
43 reviews59 followers
December 28, 2009
This classic board-cover book -- a typical specimen of the mid-20th-century Whitman children's series, which also included such greats as Lassie, Roy Rogers and the Bobbsey Twins -- is a great nostalgia trip for those who watched the 1950s TV series or love the Zorro character/legend in general. (As a long-time masked-hero devotee who faithfully watched Zorro reruns all the way through college, I fit in both categories.)

Although this "Authorized TV Edition" is a direct scene-for-scene adaptation of the television series (and therefore not very suspenseful for those who saw the original show), it still makes for pleasant escapist fare. Frazee's writing, though clearly intended for young readers, is not so simplistic that adults can't enjoy the adventure as well.

Frazee, it is worth noting, was a prolific pulp writer who published scores of novels and short stories for adults, in addition to a long list of children's titles that included books in the Lassie and Walt Disney series. A trace of that action-thriller flavor carries over into his children's books as well; perhaps that is why they are still so much fun to read!
2,490 reviews46 followers
October 16, 2012
ZORRO by Steve Frazee is based on the Disney television series of the late fifties starring Guy Williams as Zorro. The book is a novelization of the first thirteen episodes where Don Diego returns from Spain, after three years, at his father's request.

A new military commandante, Monastario, was cracking down on the Dons and the common folk for some reason.

We see the beginnings of Zorro, how Diego adopts a meek persona to hide his true nature, His only confidant is the mute Bernardo, his loyal servant.

Enjoyed this one.
Profile Image for Michael P..
Author 3 books74 followers
May 4, 2015
This blast from my childhood past does not hold up very well, but then revisiting the favorites of my youth seldom do. The story eventually becomes tedious and the prose has a much lard as Sgt. Garcia, but there is one wonderful incident after Zorro is captured that you will not predict, so I will not spoil it. The illustrations seemed wonderful when I was a child but now seem sketchy and lack compelling compositions. A good book such as this should be fun at every age, but this one is past its sell-by date.
2,940 reviews7 followers
November 15, 2018
read during school year of 1965-66, possibly in spring
Displaying 1 - 14 of 14 reviews

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