A Fighting Man of Mars is a science fictionadventure novel by Edgar Rice Burroughs, the seventh book in his Barsoom series depicting a dying, war-torn Mars inhabited by humans, green-skinned Tharks, and other races. Published in book form in 1931, it follows the exploits of Tan Hadron of Hastor, a skilled padwar (lieutenant) in the navy of Helium, who sets out on a solo mission across the Red Planet to rescue his beloved Sanoma Tora after her abduction by slavers from the pirate city of Jahar.[1][2][3]The novel was originally serialized in six parts in Blue Book Magazine from April to September 1930, marking Burroughs's return to the Barsoom saga after a two-year hiatus since The Master Mind of Mars in 1928.[3] Burroughs began writing the story in February 1929, drawing on the established universe of John Carter's adventures while introducing new elements like the tyrannical Jed Tul Axtar and his arsenal of futuristic weapons.[4] The book edition, released by Metropolitan Books, featured illustrations and quickly became part of the enduring pulp science fiction tradition, emphasizing themes of heroism, romance, and technological peril on a resource-scarce world.[5]In the narrative, Tan Hadron's journey exposes him to diverse Martian locales, including the hostile lands of Toonol and the kingdom of Phundahl, where he allies with the escaped slave Tavia and confronts threats like disintegrator rays and invisible aircraft that threaten Helium's dominance.[6] These inventions highlight Burroughs's imaginative blend of sword-and-planet action with proto-science fiction gadgets, such as radium-powered fliers and seeking torpedoes, which underscore the series' exploration of imperial conflicts and personal valor.[6] Unlike earlier Barsoom tales centered on Earthman John Carter, this entry focuses on a native Martian protagonist, shifting emphasis to internal Barsoomian politics and the moral complexities of loyalty and love.[1]The novel's reception solidified Burroughs's reputation in the genre, with its fast-paced plot and vivid world-building influencing later planetary romances, though critics often noted its formulaic structure rooted in pulpserialization demands.[2] By 2023, it entered the public domain in the United States, enabling free digital access and renewed scholarly interest in Burroughs's contributions to early 20th-century speculative fiction.[1]
Publication history
Writing and serialization
Edgar Rice Burroughs commenced writing A Fighting Man of Mars on February 28, 1929, completing the manuscript by May 10, 1929, with a total word count of 83,633. He dictated much of the novel onto Ediphone cylinders, which his secretary then transcribed.[7]This work represents the seventh installment in Burroughs's Barsoom series. It was serialized in six parts in The Blue Book Magazine from April through September 1930. The installments were structured as follows: April (chapters 1–3), May (chapters 4–5), June (chapters 6–8), July (chapters 9–11), August (chapters 12–14), and September (chapters 15–17).[8][9]Each installment featured illustrations by Frank Hoban, including seven per issue, that depicted key scenes such as battles and Martian landscapes.[10]
Book publication and editions
The first book edition of A Fighting Man of Mars was published in hardcover by Metropolitan Books in New York in May 1931, comprising 319 pages in octavo format with an inserted frontispieceillustration by Hugh Hutton.[11][12] The binding featured original red cloth stamped in green on the front panel and spine, with top edge stained green, marking it as the seventh volume in Edgar Rice Burroughs's Barsoom series following its serialization in The Blue Book Magazine.[11] First editions in this configuration are highly valued by collectors, with copies in good condition often selling for $500 or more, particularly those retaining the original dust jacket.[12]Early reprints appeared through Grosset & Dunlap in the 1930s and 1940s, including a 1932 edition that utilized sheets from the Metropolitan printing bound in red cloth, maintaining similar dust jacket designs with green lettering and maintaining the 319-page count and Hutton frontispiece.[10] A 1940 Grosset & Dunlap reprint omitted interior illustrations but preserved the core textual format and binding style, making these accessible variants for mid-century readers while varying slightly in cloth texture and jacket artwork to reflect wartime printing constraints.[10]Notable later editions include the 1962 Canaveral Press hardcover, which featured illustrations by Mahlon Blaine throughout, including black-and-white chapter images, and used pale brown boards with black titling for a total of approximately 250 pages in a more compact format aimed at revitalizing interest in Burroughs's works. In the 1970s, Ballantine's Del Rey imprint released a mass-market paperback edition in 1979 with cover art by Michael Whelan depicting protagonist Tan Hadron in action, spanning 242 pages and emphasizing vibrant, dynamic visuals to appeal to science fiction enthusiasts.[13]Modern editions extend to digital formats, such as the 2021 Kindle illustrated e-book edition, which restores original artwork including the Hutton frontispiece and incorporates enhanced visuals for portable reading, totaling around 341 pages in e-format with no changes to binding but offering variable display options.[14] These variations in binding—from the original red cloth to later tan boards and paperbacks—along with adjustments in page counts and included artwork, highlight the book's evolution across print runs, with first editions prized for their scarcity and historical significance among Burroughs collectors.[10]
Copyright and availability
A Fighting Man of Mars, published in book form in 1931, had its original U.S. copyright term of 28 years expire without renewal on December 31, 1958, placing the work in the public domainin the United States effective January 1, 1959.[1] The serialization in Blue Book Magazine from April to September 1930 similarly entered the public domain due to lack of renewal for those issues.In Australia, the work entered the public domain on January 1, 2001, based on author Edgar Rice Burroughs' death on March 19, 1950, under the pre-2005 copyright term of life plus 50 years; this status persists despite the subsequent extension to life plus 70 years for works not already in the public domain.[9]LibriVox.org, which produces public domain audiobooks, has recognized and hosted a complete recording of the novel since July 2023, aligning with both U.S. and Australian public domain availability.[15]The public domain status enables unrestricted access, with the full text available via Project Gutenberg Australia since its initial posting in November 2001.[9] Project Gutenberg's U.S. site added the e-book in May 2023, further expanding free digital distribution.[1] This has supported diverse reprints, e-book downloads from platforms like Internet Archive since 2023, and audio versions without copyright restrictions.[16]
Narrative
Plot overview
The narrative of A Fighting Man of Mars is framed as a transmission received on Earth via the Gridley Wave, a device invented by Jason Gridley for interplanetary communication, and relayed by Ulysses Paxton to Edgar Rice Burroughs.[1] The primary account comes from Tan Hadron of Hastor, a padwar in the Helium navy, who details his adventures on Barsoom (Mars).[1]Hadron's quest begins in Hastor, where he visits the estate of Tor Hatan, jed of the city, to see his daughter Sanoma Tora, whom Hadron hopes to marry. During the visit, Sanoma Tora is kidnapped by raiders in a swift airship dispatched from the distant city of Jahar, under the command of its jeddak, Tul Axtar.[1] Seeking permission to pursue her, Hadron appeals to John Carter, Warlord of Barsoom and prince of Helium, who grants him a leave of absence and the use of a one-man flier.[1] Hadron sets out immediately, flying eastward toward Jahar, but his journey is interrupted when green Tharks attack his craft, forcing a crash landing near the ruins of ancient Aukar.[1] There, he encounters and rescues a young slave girl named Tavia from a ferocious white ape; the pair then steal thoats to continue their flight across the barren plains.[1]Pressing on, Hadron and Tavia reach the city-state of Toonol, where Hadron is briefly captured by the warrior Nur An but manages to escape.[1] Their path next leads to Phundahl, a theocratic city ruled by the Holy Hekkador, where they seek aid but are ensnared by the forces of the inventor Phor Tak, an enemy of the Hekkador.[1] Phor Tak imprisons Hadron, intending to use him as a test subject for his weapons, but Tavia's intervention and Hadron's resourcefulness allow their escape, aided by Phor Tak's cloak of invisibility and a disintegrator ray device.[1] Venturing into the savage region of U-Gor, the companions battle cannibals and navigate underground rivers infested with giant lizards, all while learning that Jahar has launched an invasion of Tjanath using Tul Axtar's fleet of airships.[1] Reuniting with Phor Tak and Nur An, Hadron acquires an invisible ship called the Jhama and an arsenal of one-man fliers equipped with disintegrator rays to mount a counteroffensive.[1]In the climax, Hadron leads the assault on Jahar, infiltrating the city under cover of invisibility to confront Tul Axtar.[1] He rescues Sanoma Tora from the jeddak's palace, only for her to reveal her mercenary nature by rejecting Hadron in favor of greater wealth and power.[1] Amid the chaos of battle, Hadron also saves Tavia from capture by Jaharian forces and defeats Tul Axtar in personal combat aboard the Jhama.[1] The invasion of Tjanath is repelled, and Tavia's true identity emerges as the daughter of the dwar Kal Tavan of Tjanath, earning Hadron honors and the right to her hand in marriage.[1] The story resolves with Hadron and Tavia's union, Hadron's return to Helium, and the destruction of Phor Tak's remaining inventions to avert future dangers to Barsoom.[1] Spanning 17 chapters, the novel unfolds as a fast-paced adventure across Barsoom's diverse city-states, from the civilized polities of Helium and Hastor to the hostile wilds of U-Gor and the tyrannical strongholds of Phundahl and Jahar.[1]
Major characters
Tan Hadron, the protagonist, is a poor but honorable padwar from Hastor, serving in the 91st Umak of the troops of Helium under the command of John Carter, the Warlord of Barsoom.[17] As the son of Had Urtur, an odwar, and a princess of Gathol, he embodies the brave and resourceful Martian warrior, initially driven by his unrequited love for Sanoma Tora, which propels him into a perilous quest across Barsoom.[17] Throughout the novel, Hadron demonstrates exceptional courage, skill in combat, and loyalty, evolving from a lovesick soldier focused on personal romance to a hero who values true companionship and strength, ultimately rejecting Sanoma Tora in favor of Tavia after witnessing the former's selfishness.[17]Sanoma Tora is the beautiful and vain daughter of Tor Hatan, a wealthy noble of Hastor aligned with Helium, whose abduction by forces from Jahar serves as the catalyst for Hadron's adventure.[17] Initially dismissive of Hadron due to his lower social status, she represents the archetype of a self-centered aristocrat, prioritizing beauty and ambition over loyalty.[17] Captured and elevated to the position of Jeddara in Jahar, her character arc reveals deepening flaws, including betrayal and remorse, culminating in her plea for forgiveness from Hadron, which he denies upon recognizing her true nature.[17]Tavia begins as a slave girl rescued by Hadron from green warriors in a deserted city, displaying immediate intelligence, combat prowess, and unwavering loyalty as a fellow red Martian.[17] Enslaved since childhood after the fall of Tjanath, she aids Hadron in numerous escapes and battles, proving herself a skilled fighter and steadfast companion who earns his deep respect.[17] Later revealed as Tavia, the princess and daughter of the dwar Kal Tavan of Tjanath, her development highlights her resilience and equality in partnership, leading to her marriage with Hadron and embodying the ideal of Barsoomian womanhood through her strength and devotion.[17]Phor Tak is a reclusive, possibly mad inventor exiled from Jahar to the distant city of Toonol, where he harbors a grudge against the city's ruler for past wrongs and develops advanced weapons out of vengeance.[17] As a brilliant scientist, he creates the disintegrator ray, an air fleet of invisible ships called "flying death," and a personal disintegrating rifle, initially allying with Hadron by providing these technologies to combat Phundahl's threat.[17] His arc as the primary antagonist unfolds through obsessive paranoia and a desire for domination, ending in his death at Hadron's hands during a confrontation over control of the inventions.[17]Among the supporting characters, Artas is a loyal warrior from Toonol who joins Hadron as a steadfast companion, assisting in key escapes and fights with unyielding bravery.[17] Hekkador serves as the tyrannical ruler of Phundahl, a cunning and ambitious jed whose conquests and use of Phor Tak's stolen technologies drive much of the novel's conflict.[17] Gan Hadron, a distant relative of the protagonist and an officer from Toonol, is mentioned briefly as providing familial context and minor aid in the narrative.[17]
Themes and analysis
Adventure and warfare
In A Fighting Man of Mars, Edgar Rice Burroughs emphasizes traditional swordplay as a central element of personal combat on Barsoom, where red Martian warriors like the protagonist Tan Hadron wield long-swords in close-quarters duels and battles against foes such as white apes and rival soldiers. These encounters often highlight chivalric codes of honor, with fighters engaging in precise, skillful thrusts and parries that prioritize individual prowess over mass destruction, as seen in Hadron's rooftop duel in a ruined city and his fatal strike against a warrior in Tjanath's pits.[9] Ground battles extend this style to group skirmishes, such as defenses against cannibals in the wasteland of U-Gor, where swords are drawn for desperate last stands amid harsh terrain.[9]Radium pistols provide ranged support but are used sparingly to avoid detection, underscoring a tactical balance between melee ferocity and selective firepower.[9]Aerial dogfights introduce dynamic warfare via one-man fliers, compact aircraft powered by radium motors capable of speeds up to 2,000 haads per zode, enabling high-stakes pursuits and escapes across Barsoom's skies. Hadron pilots these vessels in evasive maneuvers against patrol boats, dodging disintegrator rays while navigating volcanic countrysides and dead sea bottoms.[9] These sequences blend exploration with combat, as fliers facilitate reconnaissance over desolate landscapes, but their vulnerability to advanced weapons amplifies the risks of inter-city conflicts. Burroughs draws parallels to early 20th-century aviation tactics, where individual pilots embody heroic daring in fluid, three-dimensional battles reminiscent of World War I air engagements.[18]Phor Tak's disintegrator rays serve as a pivotal invention, projecting invisible beams that alter metal protons to cause rapid disintegration, leaving organic matter intact and tipping the scales in large-scale warfare. Employed by the forces of Jahar, these rays dissolve entire fliers and battleships, exemplifying technological imbalance that threatens Helium's dominance and forces Hadron to counter with stealth and sabotage.[9] Complementary devices, like Phor Tak's invisibility compound—which bends light around users—and explosive "Flying Death" torpedoes, further escalate threats, turning isolated adventures into broader campaigns of conquest. This motif reflects Burroughs' pulp fascination with scientific escalation in martial conflicts, where innovation disrupts established codes of combat.[9]Barsoom's unforgiving environments propel the adventure, with vast ocher-moss deserts, overgrown canals, and crumbling ancient cities serving as backdrops for solo treks fraught with peril. Hadron's journeys across dead sea bottoms and into spider-haunted valleys demand resourcefulness, as in his navigation of underground rivers teeming with giant lizards or evasion through the skeletal ruins of Jhama.[9] These settings not only test physical endurance but also drive tactical decisions in warfare, such as using terrain for ambushes or cover during flier pursuits, emphasizing exploration as integral to survival and victory in Burroughs' martial narratives.[9]
Gender and romance
In A Fighting Man of Mars, protagonist Hadron's romantic pursuits serve as a primary motivator for his adventures, beginning with his infatuation for Sanoma Tora, whose physical beauty captivates him during a feast in Helium.[9] This initial attraction, rooted in her "chiseled beauty" and noble bearing, propels Hadron to risk his life in a quest to rescue her after her abduction by agents of Jahar, blending chivalric duty with superficial desire.[9] However, as the narrative unfolds, Hadron's affections shift toward Tavia, a fellow captive whose combat prowess and resilience earn his deepening respect, highlighting a transition from aesthetic admiration to admiration based on shared capability and loyalty.[9]Tavia embodies the "new woman" archetype prevalent in early 20th-century literature, portraying a capable and independent figure who subverts traditional damsel-in-distress tropes while aligning with Barsoomian ideals of noble womanhood. Trained in arms and navigation, she wields a sword with "master hand" proficiency, fighting alongside Hadron against cannibals and warriors, and insists on accompanying him into danger, declaring, "If you can trust me to do the work of a man, let me go with you."[9] Despite her enslavement, Tavia's resourcefulness—such as stealing a flier to escape and aiding in battles—positions her as an equal partner, reflecting Burroughs' depiction of Barsoomian women as muscular, self-assured, and aggressive yet ultimately oriented toward partnership and domestic fulfillment.[9][19]Serving as a foil to Tavia, Sanoma Tora's vanity and betrayal underscore themes of superficial versus earned loyalty in romantic partnerships. Her rejection of Hadron stems from his modest status—"Not while you have so little to offer, Padwar"—and later, in captivity, she prioritizes personal ambition, freeing the villain Tul Axtar in hopes of becoming Jeddara, thereby endangering Tavia and Hadron.[9] This self-serving treachery contrasts with Tavia's steadfast support, emphasizing that true romantic bonds arise from mutual respect rather than mere beauty or status.[9]Within the broader Barsoom series, A Fighting Man of Mars marks an evolution in female portrayals, moving beyond the more passive heroines of earlier novels like Dejah Thoris in A Princess of Mars toward figures like Tavia, who actively engage in martial roles.[9] This shift mirrors 1930s cultural changes in gender expectations, where women increasingly asserted independence amid evolving social norms, though Burroughs' heroines retain ties to traditional nobility and romantic resolution.[19]
Reception and legacy
Initial reviews
Upon serialization in The Blue Book Magazine from April to September 1930, A Fighting Man of Mars garnered positive responses from pulp fiction readers, who appreciated its brisk pacing and thrilling action sequences typical of Edgar Rice Burroughs' Barsoom tales. The magazine's circulation peaked at 189,386 copies that year, reflecting the story's contribution to its popularity among adventure enthusiasts.[20]The 1931 hardcover edition from Metropolitan Books continued this appeal, selling steadily to Burroughs' established fanbase and boosting the publisher's output during the early Depression era.A contemporaneous book review in Amazing Stories (November 1931) by C. A. Brandt further underscored the work's reception in pulp circles, positioning it as a solid entry in Burroughs' Martian series despite its predictable plot devices.[21]
In a 1963 review published in Galaxy Science Fiction, Floyd C. Gale praised reprints of several Edgar Rice Burroughs novels, including A Fighting Man of Mars, noting that they were "far superior to Tarzan and much closer to being good science fiction." Gale highlighted the exotic adventures and imaginative scope of the Barsoom series, positioning A Fighting Man of Mars as a strong entry that evoked the swashbuckling energy of classic adventure tales.[22]During the 1970s and 1980s, critics like Richard A. Lupoff in his influential study Barsoom: Edgar Rice Burroughs and the Martian Vision (1976) analyzed the novel's adherence to recurring Barsoom tropes, such as heroic quests and interstellar conflicts, while acknowledging its contributions to the series' world-building.[23] Lupoff appreciated the development of female characters like Tavia, who demonstrates agency and resilience amid the patriarchal structures of Martian society. Later feminist readings have critiqued the lingering gender dynamics in Burroughs' works for reinforcing traditional roles despite occasional subversive elements in female portrayals.Modern assessments from the 2000s onward, including fan and scholarly discussions on sites like ERBzine, emphasize A Fighting Man of Mars' role in maintaining series continuity by expanding the Barsoom universe through new protagonists and threats like the city of Jahar.[24] The Encyclopedia of Science Fiction (updated 2025) describes the Barsoom sequence, including this novel, as enduring due to its vivid planetary romance but notes that later installments like it prioritize narrative momentum over scientific rigor, rendering them energetic yet secondary in Burroughs' oeuvre compared to foundational works.[25] Overall, academic coverage of A Fighting Man of Mars remains limited relative to A Princess of Mars, with fewer in-depth scholarly analyses reflecting its position as a mid-series adventure rather than a groundbreaking text.
Cultural influence
A Fighting Man of Mars has exerted influence on subsequent science fiction works, particularly through its narrative framing and adventurous structure. In 1973, George Lucas drew inspiration from the novel's first chapter for an early Star Wars script draft titled Journal of the Whills, incorporating a similar device of interstellar transmission akin to the Gridley Wave and themes of a warrior's quest across a distant world.[26][27]The novel has appeared in various media adaptations tied to the broader Barsoom series. During the 1970s, elements of the Barsoom saga, including storylines resonant with A Fighting Man of Mars, were featured in DC Comics' John Carter, Warlord of Mars series (1972–1977), which integrated Burroughs' Martian adventures into comic book format. It has also played a minor role in fan-created content, such as fan fiction communities and role-playing games; for instance, the 2018 John Carter of Mars tabletop RPG by Modiphius Entertainment draws from the Barsoom novels, enabling players to explore planetary quests similar to those in the book.As part of Edgar Rice Burroughs' Barsoom series, A Fighting Man of Mars contributed to the establishment and popularization of the planetary romance subgenre, blending sword-and-planet adventure with interplanetary exploration and romance.[28] The novel entered the public domain in the United States following the publication of a 1963 Ace Books reprint edition without a copyright notice, facilitating free adaptations like fan works and volunteer-read audiobooks; it was added to Project Gutenberg in May 2023, and LibriVox released a full recording in July 2023, narrated by Mark Nelson.[16][1][15]While the novel lacks major standalone film or television adaptations, its motifs—such as aerial warfare and Martian city-states—echo in the 2012 Disney film John Carter, which adapts earlier Barsoom entries but incorporates series-wide elements like radium rifles and thoat steeds.[29]