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Zorro #2

The Further Adventures of Zorro

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The Further Adventures of Zorro is an exhilarating continuation of the legendary tales of the masked avenger, Zorro, created by author X. Set in the sun-drenched landscapes of Spanish California, the novel follows the daring exploits of Don Diego de la Vega as he dons the iconic black mask and cape to fight injustice and tyranny. In this thrilling installment, Zorro faces off against a new cast of villains, including corrupt officials, ruthless bandits, and vengeful adversaries, as he defends the oppressed and champions the cause of freedom. With its swashbuckling action, heart-pounding suspense, and timeless appeal, The Further Adventures of Zorro is a must-read for fans of adventure and romance.

180 pages, Kindle Edition

First published May 3, 1922

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260 people want to read

About the author

Johnston McCulley

239 books81 followers
Johnston McCulley (February 2, 1883 – November 23, 1958) was the author of hundreds of stories, fifty novels, numerous screenplays for film and television, and the creator of the character Zorro.

Many of his novels and stories were written under the pseudonyms Harrington Strong, Raley Brien, George Drayne, Monica Morton, Rowena Raley, Frederic Phelps, Walter Pierson, and John Mack Stone, among others.

McCulley started as a police reporter for The Police Gazette and served as an Army public affairs officer during World War I. An amateur history buff, he went on to a career in pulp magazines and screenplays, often using a Southern California backdrop for his stories.

Aside from Zorro, McCulley created many other pulp characters, including Black Star, The Spider, The Mongoose, and Thubway Tham. Many of McCulley's characters — The Green Ghost, The Thunderbolt, and The Crimson Clown — were inspirations for the masked heroes that have appeared in popular culture from McCulley's time to the present day.

Born in Ottawa, Illinois, and raised in Chillicothe, Illinois, he died in 1958 in Los Angeles, California, aged 75. -wikipedia

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5 stars
36 (24%)
4 stars
60 (41%)
3 stars
36 (24%)
2 stars
10 (6%)
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3 (2%)
Displaying 1 - 29 of 29 reviews
Profile Image for Anne.
4,745 reviews71.3k followers
August 26, 2023
This book embodies the term swashbuckling.
As in, Don Diego de la Vega swashes and buckles better than anyone who has ever held a sword and loved a woman.

description

I still can't make up my mind if it was great or awful but I enjoyed it either way.
Zorro sings, winks at his friends, taunts his enemies, steals romantic kisses from his betrothed, and generally is just the best at everything right up to the last page.
Is it at all realistic? No.
But dammit, it's exactly what we want to see!

description

The Further Adventures continues with a character we thought was dead at the end of the last book, the evil Caption Ramon, rising up from the grave to haunt Zorro and his soon-to-be bride, the lovely senorita Lolita.
McCulley doesn't bother to explain why Ramon isn't still dead, he just flitters past it with a quick little - he recovered from getting run through with a sword and lying on the floor in a pool of his own blood for god knows how long before someone must have realized he was still alive and took him to the ER, where I'm sure they performed cutting edge surgery that saved his life, and now he's up and running about as though nothing happened - kind of explanation.
In other words, Captain Ramon rises from the ashes like a phoenix because that first Zorro movie was a hit and now we're making a sequel.

description

On the flip side, the somewhat morally ambiguous Sgt. Gonzales makes a complete turnaround and is now solidly on the side of angels. And Zorro's friends the bold caballeros, who honestly seem like a bunch of chivalrous frat boys, also play a bigger role in this book.

description

Bill Homewood was perfect because he read this in an even more OTT way than anyone could have possibly asked him to do. I visualized the villain's twirling mustache, I saw Zorro skipping along the ship's rigging singing, and I felt faint as Senorita Lolita Pulido swooned.
I should have been rolling my eyes but I was in love with his rendition of these characters.

description

So prepare yourself, Random Goodreader.
Pirates may make our hero walk the plank, but the power of friendship, shoddy rope-tying practices, and true love will eventually save the day!
Recommended.
Profile Image for Debbie Zapata.
1,980 reviews59 followers
May 6, 2025
May 1, 520pm ~~ Review asap, I need to get a few chores done first.
May 5, 730pm ~~ When the Zapata Reading Club finished with The Mark Of Zorro it was my turn to pick the next title. I was all set to choose from the pile on my desk, but then I wondered if Gutenberg had any other Zorro stories by the original author.

And here we are with the second of the original Zorro tales. The Further Adventures was lots of fun to read aloud. It is an exciting story involving pirates who attacked the pueblo of Loa Angeles and kidnapped Zorro's bride-to-be. There was a despicable cowardly bad guy who plotted against so many people I think he lost track of which side he was really on, and a pirate chief whose one weakness was a fear of ghosts.

We happen to be watching a Spanish language telenovela about Zorro now too. This helped us both create mental pictures of the characters by simply envisioning the actors from the show, and we laughed after the first days' reading when we both admitted what we were doing.

I love the Zorro stories, and this was exciting and fast-paced. But I was just a little disappointed with Zorro himself in this book. He seemed less sure of himself than he had been in the first book. There was something missing but I can't really put my finger on exactly what without getting into spoiler territory. But that 'something' was responsible for the four star rating instead of five.

Profile Image for Paxton Holley.
2,151 reviews10 followers
March 2, 2023
The second book featuring the hero Zorro. Released in 1922.

This book was essentially Zorro vs Pirates. And it’s a lot of fun. It takes up directly after the last book. Diego and Lolita are to be wed. On the night before their wedding pirates kidnap her and raid the town of valuables. So Zorro and the caballeros have to go after Lolita to rescue her by chasing down the pirates.

It’s so much fun. I really like McCulley’s dialogue. There are several twists and turns involving the pirates I quite enjoyed. Most everyone is back. Sgt Gonzales, Captain Ramon, Frey Felipe, etc, etc. Definitely looking forward to the third one.
7 reviews
December 7, 2023
didn't Ramón die?
I mean he did... I checked again Just to make shure, and even if Zorro did not check his pulse I felt it was quite obvious that he died.
I know the storys don't take consistancy all to serious but this is a direct continuation.
I liked the book though, loved the romantic scenes. And Johnston McCulley nerfing Zorros fighting skills by making him slip/stumble will never get old for me
Profile Image for Les Simpson.
94 reviews3 followers
March 12, 2019
Wait.

A Zorro story where everyone knows his identity and he doesn’t wear a mask?

Yep.

Oh, and there’s pirates that attack the little pueblo of Los Angeles?

Sí.

If this sounds like ridiculous swashbuckling fun, you are right. There’s plenty of derring do, sword fights, narrow escapes, and acts of bravado to keep you entertained, not to mention a señorita constantly in peril from a villain who actually takes time to twirl his mustache while plotting nefarious deeds.

This is pure escapism, and it will lead me to reading more of these original Zorro tales in the months to come.
Profile Image for Amy.
1,008 reviews53 followers
April 17, 2024
The Further Adventures of Zorro, sequel to The Mark or Zorro (as it became popularly known) / The Curse of Capistrano (its original title), picks up shortly after the end of the first book. As the first book ends with Don Diego Vega being revealed as Zorro, I had guessed that this book would either reboot the series (pretending the reveal never happened) or would be set in the period before Zorro's identity became known (a la The Hound of the Baskervilles). I didn't expect - and it was an unpleasant surprise to find - that this book picks up the night before Diego and Lolita Pulido's wedding, with Los Angeles being raided on pirates on the behalf of an apparently-not-dead-after-all Captain Ramon (who had been all but stated as dead in the final events of Mark/Curse, considering the extended discussion of whether or not his death should be considered murder or the unfortunate by lawful result of a duel, but who was resurrected for plot purposes). The pirates raid the village, abducting Lolita as Ramon's share of the loot, which of course sets the course for Diego to 'become' Zorro once more to save her, followed by all his loyal caballeros.

Though it sounds like this book should have a greater focus on swashbuckling action than Mark did, that was not the case. Seeing as Zorro's taking on a whole crew of pirates by himself and/or the caballeros are trying to take on an entire encampment where they are outnumbered three to one, there's a lot of running to avoid capture, actually being captured, and bemoaning being captured in this story. Disappointingly, there's not a whole lot of emphasis on the supposed cunning of the fox, either; Diego and his posse tend to just attack the pirates head on and it's Lolita who has some (very limited) time in the spotlight actually thinking out a plan more complex than 'use sword to slash bad man until dead.'

All in all, I didn't like this book very much at all. I sincerely hope the rest of McCulley's original series is better.
Profile Image for Jordan.
Author 5 books114 followers
September 17, 2020
An enjoyably melodramatic adventure story. The Further Adventures of Zorro picks up shortly after the conclusion of The Curse of Capistrano (aka The Mark of Zorro) and follows Señor Zorro on a mission to rescue his fiancée Señorita Lolita from the clutches of pirates, who have raided Los Angeles on the night before their wedding. Turns out the pirates aren’t the main villain, as they have been recruited by someone who wants revenge on Zorro and the entire caballero class and has concocted an elaborate plot to kill Zorro, wipe out the caballeros, and steal away with Señorita Lolita.

It’s very pulpy—with dastardly villains, wild flights of diction and purplish prose, multiple cliffhanger chapter endings and daring escapes, and lots more unexpected obstacles thrown into the hero’s path—but it’s immensely enjoyable. As in the first Zorro adventure, McCulley offers up some genuine plot surprises that grow organically from character motivation, so even though the plot becomes convoluted toward the end it never feels contrived.

I listened to the audiobook narrated by British actor Bill Homewood, who really hams it up with bombastic narration and thick Spanish accents. (You will not be able to stop rolling your Rs after listening to this.) It’s fun most of the time, but sometimes it’s so over-the-top it makes the story outright silly where, with a more straight performance, the action would feel more charmingly tongue-in-cheek.

Recommended.
Profile Image for Graeme Dunlop.
349 reviews4 followers
May 17, 2024
I enjoyed this one a lot more than the first book, "The Curse of Capistrano" a.k.a. "The Mark of Zorro". Maybe it's because it has pirates and some sea adventure as well as the inevitable Zorro derring-do. Overall, the story seemed to flow better and the characters are more interesting.

I was surprised to find Captain Ramon seemingly back from the dead, but I guess familiar villains work better.

The story does show its episodic nature, though. The number of gains and reverses Zorro suffers throughout are frankly ridiculous and slightly annoying.

But it's a cracking read filled with action and adventure.
Profile Image for Dan Blackley.
1,209 reviews9 followers
May 31, 2020
This edition has The Further Adventures of Zorro, the second novel and also some of the short stories.
McCulley wrote MANY short stories featuring Zorro. This edition is one of six that are published. I recommend this edition in the series since you get the short stories as well as the novel.

Pirates kidnap Don Diego's bride to be and he must get her back. This story is a continuation of the first novel. It is fun and exciting.
360 reviews2 followers
November 23, 2017
This one qualifies as average only in comparison to its contemporaries. The prose is melodramatic, which is only emphasized by the reader's affected style (I listened to it), so much that I almost couldn't finish it. I'd probably like it better if I had read it but it lacks the tension, and humor, provided in the first book by Diego trying to keep his identity as Zorro secret.
2,940 reviews7 followers
May 16, 2021
This volume consists of 3 stories, the name of the 1st is this book's title. Zorro gets involved with,among other things, a ship, in it, the longest of the 3. The 2nd story involves a Zorro masquerder and the 3rd a mysterious titular character tha bad guys want to rally behind. Also, Don Diego escorts a would be fiance, but not Lolito from the first story!
Profile Image for the_bookish_took.
612 reviews56 followers
November 7, 2021
So I only read The Further Adventures of Zorro in this second volume of his complete adventures. I enjoyed this, but not as much as the original story. It was fun to see how bad things could get for him and to see how he would come to escape. Very dramatic with heroes and villains alike and I really hope the captain is finally dead!
Profile Image for Alison.
949 reviews271 followers
October 26, 2023
Not a bad classic sequel, though a little old fashioned in places - typical damsel in distress, pirates and numerous perils for our hero. Quick, easy read, and although you don't really need to read the first book to enjoy this one, it is still probably better to read the first one just so you know the back story of the characters.
57 reviews1 follower
August 23, 2022
Continuity be damned! With respect to plot that is; the over-the-top egos and comically casual racism, classism, and sexism continue right on!

The adventure aspect was fun enough to get me to listen to it all and decide to listen to the next one. Not great but good enough!
Profile Image for Erin.
33 reviews
December 26, 2022
Definitely not as good as the original Zorro story. This story was a bit messy and all over the place. Situations seemed repetitive and several times Zorro did things that felt uncharacteristic. Overall I give the story 3.5 stars and would recommend fans of the character to read it.
Profile Image for Mathew Nix.
100 reviews2 followers
June 19, 2018
Although not nearly as good as the first Zorro story, this is still a rollicking grand swashbuckler that is an entertaining read if you're a fan of the genre
Profile Image for Linn.
18 reviews3 followers
April 22, 2019
Entertaining, but not as good as the first one, which had way more humour. But this one has pirates, which is awesome.
513 reviews7 followers
January 19, 2020
Love Zorro

This is like a afternoon matinee. Fun book and plot. There not much more to write about this. Enjoy it
Profile Image for Marcelo Gonzalez.
255 reviews2 followers
April 13, 2023
Compared to the Zorro who fought for the downtrodden and oppressed, fighting to rescue the distressed damsal - a worn out trope even then - reads hollow.
Profile Image for Elizabeth Bell.
Author 4 books99 followers
May 26, 2024
I didn't enjoy this nearly as much as the first book. This was partly the narrator's over-the-top Spanish accent, but we also spent too much time with the bad guys and not enough time with Zorro IMO.
123 reviews
Read
December 8, 2024
A little more violent than the first book. several deaths
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Jeff J..
2,920 reviews19 followers
July 6, 2025
The second book in the Zorro series.
Profile Image for Asher Brown.
104 reviews1 follower
July 17, 2025
This one is a bit less Batman and a bit more Jason Bourne.
Profile Image for Andy.
139 reviews
September 14, 2024
Wonderful series of fun stories staring the infamous bandit Zorro! I grew up watching the Disney tv show and I love the movie with Tyrone Power too, so it's fun to see the origins of both of these.

Maybe it's just my edition, but my copy was full of typos and the stories seemed out of order since everyone knows Diego is Zorro in the story with the pirates, but in Zorro Deals with Treason, and The Mysterious Don Miguel no one knows his identity, so it was a bit confusing at first. Still lots of swashbuckling fun!
Profile Image for Eire.
88 reviews1 follower
February 9, 2022
Book #2 of the original Zorro collection. "Being a huge fan of Zorro, ’tis a very small slice of a such a fandom." I’ve read the first book "Mark of Zorro" or "Curse of Cabistrano" back in middle school. (Before the days of internet shopping, or amazon.) It took my cash allowance, a bus ride, bought a gift card/certificate, went to Barnes and Nobles and waited 4-6 weeks to bus back in to pick up the first book “The Mask of Zorro”. There were more books in the collection, but they were unavailable/overly priced at the time, and I had forgotten there were more. Then lost the first book in a flood years ago and reacquiring books weren’t high on the list then. However, with Zorro having his 100th anniversary/birthday in 2019. There was a bit of celebration with rerelease in one collection of the majority of the books. It supposedly continues the adventures of the most popular Zorro media. Then, of course, Covid-19 effected release dates, publication, shipping, and etc… BUT with the modern day internet being available. I spent 2020 acquiring the Zorro book collection…. With 2021 being the goal to read through them.
Okay, so once we get passed my fanatically over the top, TMI, chain of events of finally acquiring these books! Having reread the first book a bit ago, and having read the 2nd for the first time… Loved it!!! I actually liked this one better than the first. *Spoiler* After “The Mask of Zorro” finished with the knowledge that Don Diego and Zorro were one in the same, surprise! Don Diego having won the heart of Lolita, and running out the pueblo de Los Angeles alcalde Ramon. This further adventure continues on the eve before the wedding, Ramon, returns to seek vengeance against Don Diego and Lolita. He instigates a pirate attack against the pueblo, the de la Vega hacienda, and the kidnapping of Lolita. When the attack on the hacienda goes wrong… I mean come on…. A few pirates attacking the bachelor party of Don Diego/Zorro, the best sword fighter trained in Madrid, Spain. The pirates weren’t to be the victors. Zorro remasks and goes after the pirates whom have taken Lolita… and so a sword fighting heroism western concludes.
Profile Image for Dan.
306 reviews
November 6, 2024
This book is the second in McCulley’s series on Zorro. I enjoyed reading about the author’s background and his approach to writing, in the introduction section.
Profile Image for Marty el aventurero.
35 reviews3 followers
April 18, 2021
This second installment in the Zorro pulp doesn’t contain quite the same pazazz, romance or humor of its predecessor but still manages to possess enough bravado, narrow escapes and intrigue to hold a readers attention.

Once again our dashing hero rides circles around the hapless fools, foiling their fiendish plot, putting an end to their miscreant ways.
Displaying 1 - 29 of 29 reviews

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