Edgar Rice Burroughs Fanさんのプロフィール画像

Edgar Rice Burroughs Fanさんのイラストまとめ


This is an unofficial, fan account paying tribute to the master storyteller in his own words and the art they inspired. Official ERB account: @EdgarRBurroughs

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Other artists imagine Ras Thavas, the Master Mind of Mars: Frank R. Paul (1927), Roy G. Krenkel (1963), Bruce Pennington (1973), Michael Whelan (1979)
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in 1928, Frank was born in Brooklyn, New York. These are among his best-known illustrations:
A PRINCESS OF MARS, AT THE EARTH'S CORE, TARZAN AND THE ANT MEN, and CARSON OF VENUS

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From artist
today on Facebook:
"Together again for the 1st time! My 4 Edgar Rice Burroughs posters for a new Tom Simmons project."
No details have been released, but fans have a number of good clues to chew on here.

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It's 2137, and WWI is still raging in savage Europe. The young woman is heir to the throne of England.
art for the 1963 Ace edition of THE LOST CONTINENT, aka BEYOND THIRTY: preliminary, cover art, & a 1992 repaint.

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art from the great Mark Wheatley:
"This was used as an interior illustration, but I mocked up a cover and this version appeared in the Panthans Journal. When a girl looks over her shoulder, it can be fun. When a bear does it, your reaction is likely to be different."

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cover roughs – plus a limited-edition, colorized dust jacket (https://t.co/S9bn2qtXRN) – for the first edition of TARZAN AND THE CASTAWAYS, issued in 1964 by Canaveral Press

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Additional interior art for the first edition of TARZAN AND THE CASTAWAYS, issued in 1964 by Canaveral Press

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"Itzl Cha saw in one terrified glance that the god who bore her was flying through the air."
TARZAN AND THE CASTAWAYS

in 1964, Canaveral Press issued the first edition of 24th novel, featuring cover and interior art.

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For much more about the art and various editions of TARZAN THE INVINCIBLE, see 0722: https://t.co/NljvBp5ohP.

Cover art: Frank (1963), Robert Abbett (1970), (1995), Gerald Brom (1997)

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At last he reached his goal; and here, beneath the great throat, he found the tenderest skin his blade had yet pierced; and with a single stroke he severed the vein he had been seeking. There was a gush of blood...
TARZAN AND THE FORBIDDEN CITY, Ch. 24
Image: Boris Vallejo

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