TrackChapterLength
01Ch 01: Out of the Sea23:09
02Ch 02: The Savage Home20:33
03Ch 03: Life and Death14:44
04Ch 04: The Apes16:12
05Ch 05: The White Ape17:36
06Ch 06: Jungle Battles14:06
07Ch 07: The Light of Knowledge25:44
08Ch 08: The Tree-Top Hunter12:30
09Ch 09: Man and Man23:25
10Ch 10: The Fear-Phantom11:28
11Ch 11: King of the Apes22:32
12Ch 12: Man's Reason17:49
13Ch 13: His Own Kind29:27
14Ch 14: At the Mercy of the Jungle21:17
15Ch 15: The Forest God10:26
16Ch 16: Most Remarkable20:50
17Ch 17: Burials21:58
18Ch 18: The Jungle Toll22:56
19Ch 19: Call of the Primitive22:34
20Ch 20: Heredity25:53
21Ch 21: The Village of Torture13:18
22Ch 22: The Search Party22:07
23Ch 23: Brother Men18:16
24Ch 24: Lost Treasure16:59
25Ch 25: The Outpost of the World22:18
26Ch 26: The Height of Civilization22:00
27Ch 27: The Giant Again26:28
28Ch 28: Conclusion20:12

Notes
Running Time: 9 hours and 21 minutes
Read by: Mark F. Smith
Book Coordinator: Mark F. Smith
Meta Coordinator: Esther

Artwork
Cover:  Poster for 1918 film version of Tarzan of the Apes.
Inset: Tarzan of the Apes book cover by Fred J. Arting, 1914.
Inset: Photograph of Edgar Rice Burroughs.

Recordings
These recordings were made using the author’s original published work, which is in the public domain. The readings were recorded by members and volunteers of Librivox.org, which has generously made the recordings available to the public domain. The audio files have been edited and engineered using professional audio tools for maximum sonic quality. While Librivox condones the sale and distribution of these recordings, it is not associated with the management or operations of MP3 Audiobook Classics.




The figure of the noble savage has been a stock literary character since the 17th century, symbolizing an ideal outsider uncorrupted by civilization and thus an embodiment of the essential goodness of humanity.  The notion was central to the Romantic idea of the fall of the natural man and is often (and erroneously attributed) to Jean-Jacques Rousseau. The figure of Tarzan, first introduced in Tarzan of the Apes, is probably the best known and most enduring example of the last 100 years.  He is John Clayton, Viscount Greystroke, the son of a British lord and lady who died while marooned on the coast of West Africa. The boy is adopted and raised by a tribe of Great Apes called the Mangani and reverts to a feral state of nature.  Twenty years later he meets and falls in love with a young American woman, Jane Porter, who is identically marooned. The relationship awakens his human characteristics and begins his path back to civilization, which he experiences with mixed feelings. Contrary to the primitive character depicted in the twelve Johnny Weismuller films of the 1930's and 1940's, the original Tarzan combines the best of both worlds: he is athletic, attractive, emotionally intelligent, ethical,  generous and gracious.  The story was immensely popular when it first appeared in All-Story Magazine in 1912 and spawned 25 sequels by Burroughs as well as numerous adaptations, most recently the 2016 film The Legend of Tarzan.


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Item Info
EAN - DVD case 0701236969146
EAN - CD jacket 0682550992983
Media MP3 CD
Package DVD Case
Author Edgar Rice Burroughs (1875 - 1950)
Recording
Read by Mark F. Smith
Length 9 hours and 21 minutes
Type of Reading Solo

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Tarzan of the Apes

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(SKU DB-1196) (EAN 0701236969146 )
(SKU CJ-1196) (EAN 0682550992983 )
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(SKU DL-1196)

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