The Eternal Lover

For other use, see Eternal Lover (disambiguation).
The Eternal Lover

Dust cover from the first edition of The Eternal Lover
Author Edgar Rice Burroughs
Cover artist J. Allen St. John
Country United States
Language English
Genre Fantasy novel, Lost world
Publisher A. C. McClurg
Publication date
October 1925
Media type Print (Hardback)
Pages 316
Followed by The Mad King

The Eternal Lover is an Edgar Rice Burroughs fantasy-adventure novel. The story was begun in November 1913 under the working title Nu of the Niocene. It was first run serially in two parts by All-Story Weekly.[1] The first part, released March 7, 1914 was titled "The Eternal Lover" and the second part, released in four installments from January 23, 1915 to February 13, 1915 was titled "Sweetheart Primeval". The book version was first published by A. C. McClurg on October 3, 1925. In 1963, Ace Paperback published a version under the title The Eternal Savage. An E-Text edition has been published by Edgar Rice Burroughs, Inc. and is available online.[2]

Plot summary

A cliff-dwelling warrior of 100,000 years ago, Nu, is magically transported to the present, falls in love with Victoria Custer of Beatrice, Nebraska, the reincarnation of his lost lover Nat-ul, and the two are transported back to the Stone Age. The story is set in Africa, and the present-day sequences include Victoria's brother Barney Custer, protagonist of Burroughs's Ruritanian novel The Mad King, as well as Burroughs's iconic hero Tarzan from his Tarzan novels.

Publication

While the four Custer sibling novellas were first published in an alternating fashion; chronologically-speaking, the events of the two halves of The Eternal Lover/Savage occur between the two halves of The Mad King

Publication order:[1]

Copyright

All four novellas—as they were serialized in All-Story Weekly—are in the public domain in the United States,[3]

Footnotes

  1. 1 2 "The Eternal Lover: Publishing History (USA)". Tarzan.com.
  2. "The Eternal Lover (official online version)". Tarzan.com.
  3. "Public Domain Stories of ERB in PDF". ERBville.

External links


This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Sunday, November 01, 2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.