Mahars of Pellucidar
Cover art from Mahars of Pellucidar | |
Author | John Eric Holmes |
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Cover artist | Boris Vallejo |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Series | Pellucidar |
Genre | Science fiction novel |
Publisher | Ace Books |
Publication date | 1976 |
Media type | Print (Paperback) |
Preceded by | Savage Pellucidar |
Followed by | Red Axe of Pellucidar |
Mahars of Pellucidar is a 1976 novel written by John Eric Holmes, the first of his Pellucidar pastiches, first published by Ace Books in 1976.
Set in Edgar Rice Burroughs' imaginary interior world of Pellucidar, the book features a species of intelligent flying reptiles (Mahars) invented by Burroughs in his first Pellucidar novel, At the Earth's Core. Holmes' human protagonist, Christopher West, was named in honor of his own son, Christopher West Holmes.[1]
Plot
West is an associate of Dr. Kinsley, who has developed a teleportation beam that can also see events taking place 200 miles below the surface. When they see people about to sacrifice a beautiful woman, Christopher obtains a pocket knife and a red fire axe and has himself beamed down to rescue the woman. Due to his unusual weapon, West becomes known as Red Axe among the stone-age human beings of Pellucidar. The story deals with West's efforts to free his new-found friends from the tyranny of the Mahars.
The region visited by West is apparently an area of Pellucidar different from that in which Burroughs set his stories, from which the Mahars were driven at the end of the second book in the series, Pellucidar. Evidently there are other locales in which the reptiles are dominant. Therefore, West never runs into any of Burrough's human Pellucidarian characters, such as David Innes, Abner Perry, Dian the Beautiful, Ghak the Hairy One, or any of the others.
Sequel
John Eric Holmes wrote a sequel to Mahars of Pellucidar called Red Axe of Pellucidar, the publication of which was reportedly blocked by the Burroughs estate, despite its previous authorization of Mahars. Reportedly ready for print in 1980, it only saw publication much later in a limited private edition issued in 1993. A planned third book, to be called Swordsmen of Pellucidar, was never written.[1]