TITLE: Carson of Venus: The Edge of All Worlds (ERB Universe #1, Swords of Eternity Super-Arc #1)
AUTHOR: Matt Betts
278 pages, Edgar Rice Burroughs, Inc., ISBN 9781945462238 (hardcover, paperback, ebook and audio)
DESCRIPTION: (from the back cover): Stranded on an alien world for nearly two decades, Earthman Carson Napier finds his own past haunting him in strange and terrifying ways when he’s confronted by a sinister madman bent on ruling Amtor. To stop his opponent and his insidious weapon, Carson must gather an alliance of friends and former enemies alike in an epic struggle for control of the planet. A stand-alone novel, this book also launches ERB, Inc.’s new canonical line of stories and the “Swords of Eternity” four-book super-arc. The book also includes a new Pellucidar-related short story by Christopher Paul Carey.
MY RATING: Five out of five stars
MY THOUGHTS: If I didn't know better, I would think I had just read a long-lost Edgar Rice Burroughs manuscript discovered somewhere in the depths of the offices of Edgar Rice Burroughs, Inc. in Tarzana, CA. Matt Betts does a truly wonderful job of matching the tone and pacing of Burroughs' five original Carson of Venus books, and that includes a pitch-perfect prologue in which Betts, visiting the Burroughs offices to pitch a different project, meets Carson Napier himself – or at least Carson’s astral projection, reaching someone on Earth for the first time since the death of Burroughs himself back in 1950. Burroughs often inserted himself in his pulp adventures as the man asked by the characters in question (Tarzan, John Carter, Carson, etc.) to turn their true-life adventures into novels for the masses.
In typical Carson Napier fashion, once the action starts it doesn't stop: Carson and his team (the love of his life, Duare, and his best friends Ero Shan and Nalte) manage to turn a simple scouting mission into a combination of search-and-rescue, espionage, and a bit of social influencing as they come across other characters, despite orders from their jong ("king") to simply scout and return with information. It's not that Carson and his friends intentionally disobey orders -- it's that they just keep stumbling on things that take them further from home and closer to the source of their (and their kingdom's) latest problem. The action ranges across locations on Amtor (the native name for Venus) both familiar to long-time readers and newly-revealed in this adventure. The action scenes contain all the derring-do one expects of a Burroughs novel and all of the near-fatal-misses one expects of a Carson book. Unlike a number of Burroughs’ more well-known characters, Carson is not a capital-H Hero or a superhuman. He’s a man who made a mistake in his calculations (aimed his rocket-ship for Mars but ended up on Venus instead, inspiring some readers to call him “Wrong-Way Carson”) and just keeps finding himself in one dangerous situation after another with no choice but to survive or die.
I've always felt that as much as Burroughs interconnected his series in his original novels (Tarzan has traveled to Pellucidar; Jason Gridley's "Gridley Wave" allows communication between Barsoom, surface Earth, and Pellucidar), Carson always seemed the odd man out: he communicated his adventures to Burroughs via astral projection, but otherwise seemed to have little or no connection to the others Burroughs wrote about. Betts reveals a previously-unknown friendship between Carson and Gridley from before Carson left Earth, and (this is not really a spoiler) an appearance by Gridley in this novel not only deepens the connective tissue but also sets up the "Swords of Eternity Super-Arc" of which this is the first book. For those concerned: this IS a Carson of Venus novel first and foremost. The nods at the Super-Arc help propel this story rather than sidetrack or derail the action (the way most tie-ins to DC or Marvel Comics "Events" often derail the action of the ongoing series they appear in), and the story Betts starts in chapter one concludes in this book. No cliffhangers, no "to be continued in the pages of...". Betts follows Burroughs in telling a complete-in-one adventure yarn that still feels like a part of something larger.
But Betts isn't simply a Burroughs imitator. The author's sly sense of humor and ability to craft exciting action sequences carries through and enhances the story in ways mere imitation would not, especially in the creation of three new characters that I hope we'll see more of in any future Carson of Venus novels. I sincerely hope ERB Inc. will continue to tap Betts to write further Carson novels. He's clearly able to bring a modern sensibility to standard Burroughs fare, integrating it cleanly without denigrating or over-writing the original Master.
The book also comes with a bonus short story written by Christopher Paul Carey, which fills us in on just how Jason Gridley came to appear in front of his old friend Carson on Venus. This is the true start of the "Swords of Eternity Super-Arc," and it's a tightly-told tale that takes place in Pellucidar, is narrated by Jason Gridley, and introduces new ERB character Victory Harben. It’s not a spoiler to mention that while Victory is a new character, her personal history comes from material Burroughs actually wrote; her family can be traced back to several different Tarzan novels. We get to see just enough of her that I can confidently say she is absolutely a Burroughs heroine: as smart, tenacious, and strong as Jane Porter-Clayton, Dejah Thoris, and Duare. I'm excited to see where the Super-Arc takes her between here and the fourth book in the “Swords of Eternity” Super-Arc, Victory Harben: The Fires of Halos, which will also be written by Carey. She is sure to join the pantheon of Burroughs characters people want to know more about.
Oh, and speaking of Victory: to steal a movie phrase, be sure to stick around for the “after-credits scene.” If you’re the type of reader who skips the acknowledgements, etc., at the end of a book, you might miss out on an interesting little teaser.
**NOTE: This review was written after reading an Advance Review Copy provided by the publishers in exchange for an honest and unbiased review.**