Book cover of A Princess of Mars

Book description

Rediscover the adventure-pulp classic that gave the world its first great interplanetary romance-now featuring an introduction by Junot Diaz

In the spring of 1866, John Carter, a former Confederate captain prospecting for gold in the Arizona hills, slips into a cave and is overcome by mysterious vapors. He awakes to…

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Why read it?

11 authors picked A Princess of Mars as one of their favorite books. Why do they recommend it?

I recommend this book because it was one of the first books that made me feel like the world was bigger than anything I’d known.

When I read it, I remember feeling that rush, that sense of being lifted out of my own life and dropped into a place where courage mattered, and strange new landscapes waited around every corner. It wasn’t just adventure; it was escape, wonder, possibility. 

Readers who love getting lost in another world will understand that feeling immediately. And it fits my theme because it reminds me that stepping into the unknown, whether on Mars or…

I was 9 years old when I read this title for the first time—which is not to say the John Carter series is suitable for that age group. In 1959, I was given a junior bookworm card for the library at Union Church, Metro Manila, Philippines, where I discovered a lot of material I was too young to read.

Burroughs was a man of his times—scholar, cowboy, rancher, drifter, would-be soldier—a young adult at the turn of the 19th century when every house on every street was occupied by durable, resilient people. That was his reality. It shows in the…

This was the first time, upon finishing the first in a series, that I immediately cracked open the sequel, just to make sure my favorite hero came out alright. Burroughs, creator of Tarzan, is a giant among pulp and fantastic fiction. His tale of a gentlemanly Virginian war veteran thrust among the alien warriors of Mars is one whose DNA is woven into all modern sci-fi and fantasy and has been celebrated by everyone from Ray Bradbury to Carl Sagan.

Best of all, the place where it all began still holds sway more than a century on from its debut.…

From Jacob's list on red-blooded adventurers.

If you love A Princess of Mars...

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Book cover of The Arasmith Certainty Principle

The Arasmith Certainty Principle by Russ Colson,

Jen Hewitt, a quiet geology graduate student, doesn't actually believe in time travel. Were it possible, rocks from the age of dinosaurs should already be cluttered with artifacts from future time-tourists. Nevertheless, she proves with fellow geologist Jonathan Renner that a human skeleton encased in Pleistocene rock came from their…

This is an oldie but a goody. I read this as a kid and have read it since then many times as an adult, and it’s still great. The writing is dated, but the story absolutely rocks.

Our hero, John Carter, is a Civil War veteran. When he enters a mysterious cave, he is transported to Mars. A version of Mars where Mars is inhabited by all sorts of incredible beings.

Everything about this story is larger than life. The description of Mars. The warring tribes. The fight scenes. Our hero as he tackles the villains. How he saves a…

I remember being twelve, lying in bed and reading this into the wee hours of the night, dimly aware of the train whistle from the other side of town.

The magic of the story – the wonder of the aliens and their world – transported me and wrapped me up and made me want to go rescue alien princesses and liberate oppressed alien peoples. Nothing about this book makes sense scientifically (what else do you expect from the author of Tarzan?), but somehow it still made me want to go to be an astronaut and explore new worlds. 

Don’t write…

From Nathaniel's list on magic-in-space for middle schoolers.

John Carter finds himself mysteriously transported to another world where he fights for the new friends he finds there. I’ve picked this book from the beginning of the last century because, as a teenager, it helped form my appreciation for the adventure of discovery and to shape my sense of courage and honor.

Honor in a book this old can sometimes feel strained in modern times when we understand that one’s rightness isn’t determined by being white and male. However, the female protagonist in A Princess of Mars is strong and capable, not merely a damsel to be rescued, and…

If you love Edgar Rice Burroughs...

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Book cover of The Arasmith Certainty Principle

The Arasmith Certainty Principle by Russ Colson,

Jen Hewitt, a quiet geology graduate student, doesn't actually believe in time travel. Were it possible, rocks from the age of dinosaurs should already be cluttered with artifacts from future time-tourists. Nevertheless, she proves with fellow geologist Jonathan Renner that a human skeleton encased in Pleistocene rock came from their…

In college, I had the good fortune of working at the University theater (A coveted job). There were these two guys, older than me by about twenty years – one that worked there, one that just hung around, but both so well versed in books and film they made my professors look like children playing at educators. These two probably influenced me far more than any film classes I took. They would offer suggestion after suggestion, but there was one they’d continue to bring up. Edgar Rice Burrough’s John Carter. “Star Wars basically stole everything from those books!” They’d…

From Jeremy's list on 13 year olds who love reading.

This is the book that got me interested in sci-fi/fantasy. If you like classical strong heroes and beautiful heroines, the Martian Chronicles is the series for you. John Carter, the honorable gentleman from Virginia and civil war veteran is transported to mars where he meets a warlike band of green martians and their red martian captive, the beautiful Princess Dejah Thoris. Carter, with his faithful martian hound Woola, have to figure out how to rescue the princess and defend her country of Helium.

I wish the movie adaptation had been more faithful to Burroughs’ original story. Growing up I always wondered what it would be like to travel to Mars and the other planets. Burroughs must have wondered the same as he created this civilization of strange beings and humanoids for John Carter to encounter. Carter is the kind of hero that really stands out in Superversive storytelling. 

From Richard's list on superversive fiction.

Edgar Rice Burroughs was one of the old masters of science fiction. I started reading his books at a young age. I would go back and forth from fantasy to sci-fi. This book, later made into a movie, follows yet another underdog hero mysteriously sent to Mars during the American Civil War to find himself in the middle of another kind of battle, this time with superhuman strength and the ability to leap great distances due to the light gravity of Mars. This book is character building at its best by one of the grandfathers of science fiction. 

If you love A Princess of Mars...

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Book cover of The Arasmith Certainty Principle

The Arasmith Certainty Principle by Russ Colson,

Jen Hewitt, a quiet geology graduate student, doesn't actually believe in time travel. Were it possible, rocks from the age of dinosaurs should already be cluttered with artifacts from future time-tourists. Nevertheless, she proves with fellow geologist Jonathan Renner that a human skeleton encased in Pleistocene rock came from their…

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