When the book
challenge I’m following this year told me to read a book that someone tells has
“changed their life”, I found it quite impossible.
I don’t have
conversations with people where they talk about the books that have changed
their lives. Ecuadorians in general don’t read many books. And when I lived in
Finland I was still in High School and people’s lives weren’t changed by books
at that age.
So I found myself in
Facebook. Where else could a pose a question like that to as many people as
possible, and hope to get an answer.
I got the usual
answer that Bible had changed people’s lives. It is the book that has changed,
and keeps changing my life. But I think writing a book review of Bible just is
beyond my abilities.
I could write book
reviews on specific books of Bible. But nobody told me of a specific book in
Bible that had changed their life. So that wasn’t possible.
The one answer that aroused
my curiosity was by a friend who told me that Tarzan books had changed her
life. That was something I couldn’t pass.
I won’t tell why the
books changed her life but it has to do with the work she does now, as an
adult. But I will tell that Tarzan books did affect my life also.
I read them quite
many times as a child and even as a teenager. My dream was to live in Africa
myself, to see the lions and elephants, the jungle and the apes.
You can imagine my disappointment
when I found out that real Africa wasn’t exactly as Edgar Rice Burroughs
describes it. Or that the great apes he writes about don’t even exist. I don’t
know till this day which was the more painful disappointment of the two.
I think I stopped
reading the books partly because of my disappointment, although I did continue
reading Edgar Rice Burroughs’s other books. As a teenager I was especially fond
of his Mars and Center of the Earth books. And later on, as an adult, I was delighted
when I found his Venus books.
Another reason to
stop reading Tarzan books was because I grew up and they seemed too two dimensional
and childish to me.
It was a great
delight to read the first four books of the series again. The characters are
two dimensional and cartoonish; Edgar Rice Burroughs was the great master of
pulp fiction after all. And there is undoubtedly much more racism and pure
ignorance in the books than I remember from my childhood. But at the same time,
the books are enjoyable and a fun, light read.
Something I must also confess, is that I never really enjoyed the Tarzan movies. Especially the old ones, where Tarzan can't even really speak and is always just swinging around undressed with the jungle animals. They completely miss the side of him as an English lord, posh, polished and cultured as any of them.
My all-time favorites
have always been the Tarzan of the Apes and The Son of Tarzan, both of which
describe the struggle to survive in the jungle. And I can’t really describe how
many times I played Tarzan myself in my childhood.
I never accepted to
be Jane, she was too boring. I was Tarzan, so were my friends, and my little
sister, and any other little siblings there were, would be the apes. It did
take negotiations but we made it do, and had a lot of fun too. Luckily our
parents considered playing in the forest a healthy exercise for us, as well as
climbing to trees and jumping from one to another. And nobody ever broke any
bones.
I enjoyed a lot of Edgar Rice Burroughs' books as a young person as well! Thanks for the interesting review! (Though you left me curious about your friend's reason for these books being "life changing.") Thanks for sharing with the Literacy Musing Mondays Linkup!
VastaaPoistaI am just dying to know about how these books were life-changing for your friend!!! Thanks for being a part of Booknificent Thursday this week on Mommynificent.com! Always great to have you!
VastaaPoistaTina