A yoked Tarl Cabot beneath the haughty gaze of Lara, Tatrix of Tharna. Bondage! |
Daring admission: I am reading John Norman’s controversial Gor
series and so far have enjoyed it, un-ironically. Tarnsman of Gor and Outlaw of
Gor are entertaining sword-and-planet, with the latter ending on a
cliff-hanger that has hooked me enough to want to seek out the third in the
series, Priest-Kings of Gor.
Hold the pitchforks and torches for just a moment as I
explain why.
Yes, they are a 100% unrepentant pastiche of Edgar Rice Burroughs’
John Carter of Mars. Tarnsman of Gor is
a shameless clone of A Princess of Mars.
You’ve got your strange interplanetary journey of the main character, Tarl
Cabot, an excellent swordsman and general bad-ass back on earth. Tarl falls in
love with a beautiful woman, saves the day, and at the end is sent back to a
drab earth, left to pine for his love beyond the sun and dreaming of his
eventual return.
The Gor series is of course more than little controversial.
There are hints of the infamous S&M/dominance narrative creeping in after
two books, and a few elements “problematic” for a 21st century
audience. Female slaves submit to men, and lose their autonomy, in a ritual
that includes kneeling and placing their crossed wrists over their head. In
general women in the Gor universe seem to spend an in ordinate amount of time cuffed,
in chains, or asking to be whipped. Without question there is a weird
undercurrent of what a healthy male/female relationship should look like, but
in these early books it’s not so pronounced, and can be written off to Norman’s
attempt at creating a unique, alien culture. There is no explicit sex, nothing
(beyond ample violence, though this is largely stylized) to even warrant an “R”
rating. From what I understand the series eventually goes entirely off the
rails with S&M overwhelming the plot. But through two books at least these
elements are (mostly) downplayed.
Is there better sword-and-planet to read? Absolutely. LeighBrackett is probably the best example of this sort of fiction, and of course
you should go straight to the source and re-read Burroughs. Seek out Otis
Adelbert Kline’s S&P, or Adrian Cole’s The Dream Lords Trilogy, for more
examples. But honestly, the first two Gor novels are solid entertainment. Two
books in and I find them to be entertaining, well-paced, with plenty of plot-twists
and cliff hangers. Gor possesses an interesting alien culture. And Norman is a
good writer. His style lacks a little of the Burroughsian/Howardian narrative
drive, but it does the job, and in places is elevated, even inspiring.
If this makes me an awful person or just someone with
unbelievably bad taste, so be it. I also think 80s metal is the pinnacle of music, so consider that in your evaluation.