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Amazon Nights

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When one thinks of the classic adventure-story authors of the pulp fiction era, H. Rider Haggard, Talbot Mundy and Rafael Sabatini may come first to mind. But Arthur O. Friel's stellar contributions -- particularly his stories featuring Lourenco and Pedro, two workers on a rubber-tree plantation in the Amazon Jungle. Their adventures in the Amazon's mysterious back-country certainly deserve honorable mention. Here are tales of peril and last-minute rescue, brutal savages and men of honor, snake-worshipping armies and half-ape Lost Races-and many more! For in the shadows of the rain-forest, many evils lurk... human and otherwise! Features a new introduction by Darrell Schweitzer, eight short stories and The Jararaca, a complete novel.

348 pages, Paperback

First published March 1, 2005

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About the author

Arthur O. Friel

47 books4 followers
During much of career Arthur Olney Friel was one of the bestselling writers of pulp fiction in the United States.

Born in Detroit, Michigan,Friel, a 1909 Yale University graduate, had been the South American editor for the Associated Press which provided him with real-world experience. In 1922, he took a six-month trip down Venezuela's Orinoco River and its tributary, the Ventuari River. His travel account was published in 1924 as The River of Seven Stars.

After returning from the Venezuela trip, many of Friel's stories were set in that part of the world. He remained a popular writer of adventure stories throughout the 1920s and 1930s. In the 1930s, his short stories began appearing regularly in the various pulp magazines. His stories were almost always set in Venezuela.

The 1920s were his most productive time as a fiction writer, with an average of 5 appearances per year in Adventure during that time. The thirties were less productive, but he still managed to have one or two stories every year published in Adventure, except 1937, when he had none.

He seems to have stopped writing fiction by the time WW2 came around. The decline of the pulps may have been a contributing factor.

Arthur O. Friel died in Concord, New Hampshire in 1959 at the age of 73.

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Displaying 1 - 3 of 3 reviews
Profile Image for Paul Cornelius.
1,044 reviews42 followers
August 10, 2025
This volume contains Friel's early Lourenco and Pedro short stories plus one novella, The Jararaca. They all appeared in Adventure, the leading pulp magazine for this genre, between late 1919 and 1921. As with most of his work, the setting is the Amazonian jungle of Brazil. And the two heroes, Lourenco and Pedro, who are featured throughout, are workers on a rubber plantation. But being born adventurers, or bush men, as they identify themselves, they are continually called upon to scout the immense property holdings of their employer, Coronel Nunes. The stories and novella are loosely connected, although they can be read independently with no need to worry about the earlier works.

But here is what I find intriguing about Lourenco and Pedro. Essentially, they are a South American reworking of the mountain men of the American West. They blaze new trails and pathways. They encounter new Indian peoples. And they are able to facilitate civilizational connections through their speaking of Portuguese, Spanish, various Indian languages, and English. They are twentieth century Brazilian versions of Jim Bridger or Jedediah Smith. Or at least it seems so to me. Friel, born in 1887 just as the American Frontier was coming to a close, likely grew up well versed on dime novels about the West and its adventure heroes. Once in South America as a newspaper editor, again, I am supposing, he heard stories and tales and found fertile ground to incorporate this American genre into an entirely new culture. Later, Friel would make his own adventure, exploring the Orinoco. Not much seems to be known about Friel, but I'd bet my last dollar this brief sketch of mine of his inspiration is pretty close to the truth.

The technique for the stories is a recurring one. Lourenco begins his tales, usually referring to the sighting of some demon, devil, or other mystical or mythological creature. Then, the flashback begins and the reader hears of how Lourenco and his explorer companion, Pedro, encounter the monster. It usually occurs through some mechanism that combines discovery, revenge, and rescue. In the process, the creature or demon reveals itself as either a false monster or something easily explained as nothing more than an exceptionally dangerous version of a natural occurring reptile or animal or some individual adopting the characteristics of the animal.

This latter point also allows Friel to give vent to his suppositions about biological evolution. He appears to be something of a Lamarckian. For the Indians and renegades he encounters are people who assume the characteristics of their environments. Tribes and individuals adopt the features of apes, snakes, and spiders. Some go further, seeming to be hybrid races.

Such an intriguing view of a land and time now gone forever. Friel managed to encounter it all while it was still a mystery. And the wonder of that encounter fills each page in an almost routine manner. Shadows along the shore hide canoes from discovery by enemies on Amazonian lakes that shimmer under the brilliance of a full moon at night. And underneath the placid surface, piranhas, alligators, and river snakes lie in wait. Meanwhile, one step from the canoe into the bush brings the chance of abduction, venomous bites, seductions, poisoning, and sickness. Danger abounds. Yet you long to experience it, if not in your own shoes then through the bare feet and arms of Lourenco and Pedro.
Profile Image for Apolinar Perdomo.
11 reviews8 followers
October 24, 2015
No one writes adventure tales like this anymore; I could actually feel my pulse pounding faster when I reached the climax of some of these tales. Friel has just earned his place next to Robert E. Howard and Edgar Rice Burroughs by making the Amazon jungle as exotic and mysterious as the landscapes of Barsoom or the Hyborian Age. Not high literature by any standards, but this is the kind of storytelling that has made me a lifelong reader!
Profile Image for Paul McNamee.
Author 20 books16 followers
November 24, 2019
Surprisingly good collection of South American jungle pulp tales. Pedro & Lourenco are a stalwart adventuring duo. These stories sweat with the steam of the jungle, full of intrigue, danger and menace. Flora & fauna are the least of the terrors the men encounter. Man is the keenest, meanest dweller of the jungle. Hot-bloods, murderers, mad men, cannibals and savages. Passion, murder, revenge, and betrayals.
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