The Warlords of Mars Audiobook By Edgar Rice Burroughs cover art

The Warlords of Mars

Mars Series #3

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The Warlords of Mars

By: Edgar Rice Burroughs
Narrated by: Gene Engene
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About this listen

This is the third audiobook in the "Mars Series".

In the frozen wastes of Polar Mars lay the home of the Holy Therns, powerful and brutal rulers. Only John Carter dared to go there to find his lost Dejah Thoris.

©1919 Edgar Rice Burroughs (P)2005 Books in Motion
Action & Adventure Fantasy Fiction Science Fiction Space Opera Space Mars
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What listeners say about The Warlords of Mars

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it would be great if you had all 11 books

If you could sum up The Warlords of Mars in three words, what would they be?

attention holding brilliance

What was one of the most memorable moments of The Warlords of Mars?

when john carter was put up on trial to be proclaimed warlord

Which character – as performed by Gene Engene – was your favorite?

all

Was this a book you wanted to listen to all in one sitting?

yes

Any additional comments?

it agravates me that you only have the first 5 books in this series when there are 6 or 7 more books ive listend to the 5 and would very much like to have the others i have listed them in my wish list but it will not post to your web page for some reason

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1 person found this helpful

  • Overall
    3 out of 5 stars
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    3 out of 5 stars

Last and least of the trilogy

The third and final installment of John Carter of Virginia's adventures on Mars is the weakest. It's more of the same--a series of lightning-paced leaps from one brink-of-death peril to the next--as Carter travels from the South Pole to the North Pole of Mars (yes, literally) in search of his abducted wife, the Incomparable Princess Dejah Thoris. This time, though, there are none of the interesting "sidekick" characters that liven up in Books 1 & 2 ("Princess of Mars," "The Gods of Mars"). Characters waft in and out just in time to rescue our hero, then disappear to leave him alone at center stage.

Having introduced the Green, Red, White, and Black Men of Mars in the earlier books, of course there had to be a Yellow Race, and they show up here. Unlike the other ethnicities, however, the Yellow Men (and women, one presumes, although women are pretty much absent from this third installment, except for the Incomparable Princess who always seems to have just enough time to cry out "John Carter!" before being snatched away and abducted once again) have no interesting "back story," they are just men, good ones and evil ones.

It's a harmless tale, and at least wraps up John and Dejah's story happily-ever-after. Burroughs wrote numerous other books in this series, but they are "spinoffs" and not integral to this preeminent trilogy. This recording of Gene Engene's narration is of higher production quality than his rendition of "Gods of Mars" (which is by far the better book). The static and pacing issues that marred Engene's "Gods" reading have been fixed here.

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One of the best performances for the Mars series

What did you like best about this story?

I read this series when I was a teenager and still love re-read (or re-listen) to it. I new reader may find it a bit dated but I think that many of the characters and concepts are great.

Did the narration match the pace of the story?

I would not say that he is one of my favorite narrators but I think that Gene is the best narrator for this series that I have found. I can not stand to listen to most of the others.

If this book were a movie would you go see it?

Yes

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