In my late pre-teens and early teens I was devouring Edgar Rice Burroughs’ books, first from my uncle’s shelves and then from the library. The Mars series was and still is my favourite. I was reading the Mars series in order and saw that A Fighting Man of Mars (seventh in the series) was waiting for me a few books away. However, by the time I was supposed to read it, it wasn’t there anymore. OK, someone else was reading them too. So I waited. And waited. Finally I decided to skip it and went on with the series, as obviously someone had stolen it. I’ve never seen the Finnish translation since.
Nowadays those 1970s translations are outrageously expensive in online bookshops and, oddly enough, A Fighting Man of Mars isn’t available even for a ridiculous price. I’ve got a Kindle edition of the original but I decided that I want to own a hardcopy of it, so I bought myself a cheap paperback. Thus, after some 35 years, I finally got to read A Fighting Man of Mars!
Note: There are some MINOR SPOILERS ahead!
It was worth the wait, because the Fighting Man is among the very best of the Mars books. In the foreword we meet Ulysses Paxton, the hero of the excellent Master Mind of Mars, but he merely narrates the story of Tan Hadron of Hastor to Burroughs.
Burroughs’ choice of the main character was really excellent. Even though I truly love the Mars books (and much of the other Burroughs stuff too), a bit of a problem is that being born on the Earth, both John Carter and Ulysses Paxton are superheroes. And so is Carter’s son Carthoris, because of his father’s superior genes. Tan Hadron, on the other hand, is just a normal red Martian, a mere padwar (equal to our lieutenant). Thus, he’s on an equal footing with his opponents and cannot simply escape by jumping to a roof like the previous heroes could.
The plot is the usual damsel in distress stuff. Of course it is, what did you expect? This is a Burroughs novel, after all. However, this time the damsel named Sanoma Tora isn’t worthy of our hero’s love. This is obvious to the reader from the start, but not to rather thick and slow-witted Tan Hadron (when it comes to the matters of the heart, otherwise he’s an excellent hero). Along the way he meets two female slaves, Tavia and Phao, who both are strong and capable characters in their own right. For example, when confronted with cannibals, Tavia is the one who makes the first kill, not Tan Hadron.
At this point I need to quote Wikipedia: “Tavia is an atypical Burroughs heroine; depicted as self-reliant and competent with weapons, witty and intelligent…” Atypical? I don’t know what books the Wikipedia folks have been reading, but Burroughs had numerous strong female characters. Sure, there are many fainting princesses too, but for adventure books that were written a hundred years ago, the women in Burroughs’ universe were often very competent. Of course Burroughs wouldn’t get published nowadays because there are damsels in distress in his books, but then again Burroughs wouldn’t get published for a number of other reasons either. Thus, for its time and in this particular genre, Burroughs’ female characters were often, though certainly not always, very strong. Tavia is an excellent example of them.
Because Tan Hadron is no superhero, he needs a buddy. This role is played by Nur An. He unfortunately disappears from the picture midway through the story and isn’t seen again until the end. If his role would have been more consistent and/or Burroughs would have given him something to do on his own, A Fighting Man of Mars would have been even better. A lost opportunity there, methinks.
A Fighting Man of Mars is one of the more “scientific” Barsoom books. There are disintegration rays and invisibility cloaks, and in Phor Tak we have a genuine mad scientist. Heigh-oo! This is of course all excellent stuff.
A look at the chapter titles gives a good idea of the book: V. To the Pits; VI. Sentenced to Die; VII. The Death; VIII. The Spider of Ghasta; X. The Flying Death; XII. The Cloak of Invisibility; XIV. The Cannibals of U-Gor. It can’t really get much better than this.
There are a couple of instances where Burroughs resorts to incredible coincidences in order to get our heroes out of trouble. He did that in most of his books, which is a pity, because he was a good enough writer to come up with something smarter. I guess it was more important for him to get the book finished fast rather than to stop and think about a more sophisticated solution.
Other than that, it’s very hard to find flaws in A Fighting Man of Mars. It’s definitely one of the very best in the Mars series. It’s hard to beat the brilliant original trilogy, but this one gets very close and is among the best books Burroughs ever wrote.
A couple of words about the edition I read are in order. It’s A Four Square Book, from 1966. On the cover it says “A Fighting Man of Mars: Edgar Rice Burroughs”. They’re in the same font. Thus, the reader gets the impression that ERB himself is the fighting man. Below that it reads “Can the fiendish secret weapon defeat John Carter?” The blurb in the back cover says, among other things, this: “Once again the dynamic John Carter is in action, searching for a beautiful girl who has been kidnapped and hidden on the inhospitable planet of Jahar.” Yes, we meet John Carter briefly in the beginning and at the end of the book, but he’s a very minor character. And of course it’s the city of Jahar, not the planet. Nuts.
Also the cover is weird. There are two moons and flying ships, so that’s OK. And there’s a thin, tall and muscular man wearing two swords and a ray gun of some sort, and not much more. Presumably this is supposed to be Tan Hadron. So basically that’s fine too. But he’s green. How did such terrible editions ever get published?
Anyway, if you’re a Burroughs fan or even just somewhat familiar with his work, A Fighting Man of Mars is definitely a must. After waiting 35 years or so, I’m truly glad I finally got to read it.
4.5/5