Marvel's top talents of the 1970s take on Edgar Rice Burroughs' savage swordsman of Barsoom! John Carter, a hunted soldier on the Western frontier, is transported to an alien world filled with six-armed aliens, sinister super-science and the love of his life, the incomparable Dejah Thoris! A must-have science-fiction epic in the Mighty Marvel Manner! Collecting JOHN CARTER, WARLORD OF MARS #1-28 and ANNUAL #1-3.
Marvin A. "Marv" Wolfman is an award-winning American comic book writer. He is best known for lengthy runs on The Tomb of Dracula, creating Blade for Marvel Comics, and The New Teen Titans for DC Comics.
John Carter, Warlord of Mars Omnibus collects issues 1-28 plus annuals 1-3 of John Carter, Warlord of Mars published by Marvel in the late 1970s.
I read the first three or four John Carter of Mars books sometime just after the dawn of time when I joined Goodreads. I liked the concepts well enough but wasn't a fan of Edgar Rice Burroughs' prose. I've had my eye on this omnibus for years and finally found one cheap enough to justify buying it.
Marvel put a lot of heavy hitters on this book. Marv Wolfman and Chris Claremont handled the bulk of the issues with Bill Mantlo, Peter Gillis, and Alan Weiss each taking a single issue. The art was also an all star team headed up by Gil Kane, Dave Cockrum, Carmine Infantino, Ernie Colon, and others, with Walt Simonson and Frank Miller getting some early work.
The bulk of the book is made up of two stories: Air Pirates of Mars and Master Assassin of Mars. Both are original works but capture the spirit of Edgar Rice Burroughs very well. Even by Bronze Age standards, Air Pirates is wordy as hell. I respect what Wolfman was trying to accomplish with his first person narration in captions but you know a comic is wordy as hell when Chris Claremont's stories aren't the wordiest.
Anyway, the stories encapsulate the pulp fun of ERB's originals. There are sword fights, chases, gunfights, and countless reversals of fortune. Dejah Thoris is a lot more capable here than in the pulp originals that I've read.
The art is fantastic in this omnibus. Despite having close to 20 artists and as many inkers, the series doesn't feel as disjointed as one might think. Dave Cockrum did great design work on the characters and the other artists stick to those designs for the most part. Dejah's look changes the most but a metal bikini isn't appropriate for all situations.
Mars looks suitably bleak, the green men look as monstrous as they should, as do the white apes, thoats, and other creatures. This had to be a labor intensive book with all the Martian cityscapes and panels choked with figures to draw.
I liked this book quite a bit but it got to be like Homer Simpson eating that 12 foot sandwich after a while. It's apparent nobody expected anyone to read two and a half years of these comics one right after another but nobody did back then.
John Carter, Warlord of Mars Omnibus is a hulking tome of Martian fun. Four out of five stars.
A mammoth collection of John Carter comics. 631 pages, with writers such as Chris Claremont, Peter Gillis, Bill Mantlo, Alan Weiss, and Marv Wolfman. Some of the episodes stay pretty close to ERB's tales while others spin wildly away. We get a lot more Dejah Thoris and Tars Tarkas in this collection than in ERB, which I liked. All in all, though, I much enjoyed the collection and thought it well worth the cost.
On the plus side? Dejah Thoris gets to kick some a%&, she’s not just a bauble that people keep stealing from John Carter. [Of course, she still gets kidnapped. A lot. Nevertheless, she’s often instrumental in her escapes, and give her a sword or a radium pistol and she gives as good as she gets.]
On the down side, the stories tend to drag like a B-movie where the director has no sense for pacing, and they still suffer from ERB’s penchant for lazy writing – aka “John Carter’s dumb luck.”
I shouldn’t pine for the days when I was stupid, but I wish that I could continue to enjoy some of my childhood favorites without being gob smacked with their racism and sexism today. You lost me on this one when John Carter reminisces about the “good old days” before the war and imagines taking Dejah Thoris to a plantation ball. Then, later in the story arc, he credits his guerilla warfare skills to those honorable Southern gentlemen Nathan Bedford Forrest, founder of the first KKK, and J.E.B. Stuart.
Two stars – not recommended unless, like me, Barsoom played a big role in getting you interested in SF and you can still extract some pleasure in going back to the Red Planet. This series introduced me to ERB and eventually led me to read my first John Carter novel, The Gods of Mars.
If we don’t want Barsoom to become a forgotten bit of American pulp literature remembered only by academics, we need to reimagine John Carter for a modern audience since a former Confederate officer obsessed with race, who confronts most obstacles with violence, and is – let’s face it – dumb as a rock, is no hero.
Pulpy and sweet like a Danish Bakery cupcake. Tried the book far too young--didn't finish it until last year, but the comics were cheap and easy. I'd read it again.
This is a gigantic collection of John Carter comics, and it's....OK. Some of the art is pretty good. Some of it is meh. Most of the writing is in that old Stan Lee Marvel style, where there's WAY too much unnecessary dialog and caption. Some of it is based on Burroughs' novels. Other parts are 'original.' Nothing is all that great. I can't really recommend it. I mean, I'm pretty sure I'm the target audience, and I had a hard time making my way through it.
This massive collection of Marvel comics adapting the John Carter of Mars characters. I am not clear having only read the first John Carter book, but I think it is mostly stories created by the comic writers usually occurring in the period of his first visit to Mars which the first book sort of skims over. Many strange and wonderful creatures and machines are on display that our main characters have to contend with.
The stories of swashbuckling adventure are evocatively told in this comic, very typical of 70s comics and including various notable creators like Marv Wolfman and Chris Claremont. The violent and amoral (although not completely unprincipled) aspects of the main characters is often on display, often involved in brutal struggles for survival. This story of an Earthman who displays incredible strength and leaping power (thanks to lower gravity) when mystically transported to Mars is sort of what you might imagine by the idea of Conan on Mars with the occasional explosive radium round or flying barge thrown in.
The book also contains some character design sketches by Dave Cockrum, alternate cover art for the series, an interview with Marv Wolfman from FOOM (Friends Of Old Marvel) about the comic series and a reproduction of that cover of that FOOM issue (No. 20).
There are plenty of reasons why I love 70s Marvel so much. I could go on and explain many of them and, as for so many others, I just can't. If there's a time when Marvel embraces pulp with a passion and delivers something with such a fresh look but retaining all the old school charm it's this, and John Carter, allegedly all-father of pulp, definitely shines.
But let's calm down here. This might not reach the levels of excellence of, say, Conan, Shang-Chi, Killraven and/or Tomb of Dracula and you can easily see the outline and pattern followed so many times in the past (and future). Plus, the horrible cheesiness between lovebirds John and Dejah Thoris can be unsufferable. I'll spare you the number of times they save the day thanks to the "power of love"... but again, it still showcases the talent, good eye for epic and thirst for adventure of this awesome bullpen, tapping the beat of what makes a popular comic book great. Not only that, but I can't help awarding it four shiny stars even if it's just because of the wonderful opening arc, adapting one of Burroughs' novels through 12 issues, penned by Marv Wolfman and astonishingly drawn to life by Gil Kane himself.
A omnibus you dont see quite often, i did not grew up with John Carter, and have not read anything of the character, until now. This omnibus has some serious talent attached! The first half is writen by Marv Wolfman with almost every issue a new artist. Dave Cockrum, Sal Buscema, Frank Miller, Ross Andru, Walter Simonson and Carmine Infantino, just every one a class act in its own ! Especially liked the work of Infantino. The second half is writen by none other then Chris Claremont. Crazy how many great comic legends are attached to this book.
This is not a graphic novel version of Edgar Rice Bourrough's novels. Rather they are Marvel's exploration of events that may have occurred between paragraphs 2 and 4 of chapter 27 or so, where a 9 year gap is indicated. (Per notes by the creator). It was a great pulpy read and nice brain rest after the heavy duty read of the Icelandic Sagas, and fit the bill of being a large hardcover, perfect lockdown reading.
Alas, my copy was missing a few pages (they were blank), but they were issues of the comic in which I had the originals. I primarily purchased this omnibus edition to get those two issues (one main series issue and one annual issue) that I did not have in my collection. Marvel's series is pure adventure fare, like much of their work in the era...there were good writers and artists who worked on this series and is well worth a read if you're a Burroughs "John Carter" fan, or a fan of the writers and artists who worked on the comic itself.
I picked this up after watching the John Carter movie on a plane coming back from Europe. I have always been a fan of Burroughs Barsoom, and I had read the original comics many, many years ago. I wanted to re-read them, and this was an affordable way to do so. This collection is reprinted in black and white, and the lack of color enhances the artwork. The stories are well paced and the art adds to the impact. A good read. I enjoyed slipping back in time and reading these again. This is the quality that you would expect from Marv Wolfman, Chris Claremont, Gil Kane and Frank Miller.
While this became a slightly less faithful comic series adaptation of the Barsoom novels after Marv Wolfman used all the material in those books, I think this collection will hit a homerun with the same audience that enjoyed the novels because it successfully achieves the same kind of otherworldly, Sci-Fi essence that ERB achieved with the books. This collected edition is usually $100.00 so I wouldn't recommend it for those who aren't serious hard-core fans of John Carter or who aren't collectors of graphic novels.
This omnibus is definitely worth the price tag! Marvel's John Carter series was a fun comic book, but one I'd never think to ever see reprinted. The entirety of the series featured adaptations of two Edgar Rice Burroughs novels, along with some shorter tales. Lots of great artwork, from Gil Kane, Dave Cockrum, Mike Vosburg, Ernie Colon and many more. Well over 30 issues of sci-fi goodness reprinted in full color!
Collecting Marvel comics John Carter comic series. Nice art and some decent sci-fi swashbuckling adventure. The writing tends to lead to a ton of captions per page, trying to ape Burroughs style, which can slow the pace to a crawl, but otherwise a fun read.
Maybe this was a classic and good old fashioned sci-fi fun, that was just the problem. There are "good old" stuff and then there is stuff that is just old. This was just old and time had not been kind to it.
The comic books were definitely a good subversion from the first five novels by Edgar Rice Burroughs. They at some points seemed as revisions of different stories in the novels revamped with John Carter and Dejah Thoris as the main characters.