The Beasts of Tarzan
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Completed, First published Mar 02, 2026

A suffocating green darkness clings to every page. This is not the Tarzan of youthful adventure, but a primal reckoning with the rot beneath the jungle’s bloom. Burroughs peels back the veneer of Eden, revealing a Tarzan haunted by echoes of savagery – not just within the ape-men, but within himself. The air hangs thick with the scent of decay, of ritualistic carvings in crumbling stone, and the stifled screams of those consumed by the beasts’ ancient claim. It’s a descent into a forgotten world where the line between man and animal dissolves in a fever dream of blood and bone. The narrative pulses with a claustrophobic dread, mirroring the labyrinthine caves where the beasts hold sway. Shadows stretch long and hungry, mirroring Tarzan’s own predatory instincts awakened by the encroaching horror. This is a Tarzan stripped bare, wrestling not with civilization’s intrusion, but with the monstrous inheritance buried deep within the earth and within the very heart of his untamed domain. The jungle breathes malice, and the reader is left gasping for air alongside a Tarzan stalked by something older, something colder, than the jungle itself. It’s a story of primal terror, of being hunted not by what *lives*, but by what *remains*.
Copyright: Public Domain
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