This is the first book I have finished reading in the Sense of Wonder: A Century of Science Fiction collection. It as a great joy to read about a man’s adventures around Mars, not sure much for the adventures themselves but for how it painted the author’s world. I found it most amusing that the protagonist at all points managed to master skills which should generally take years, if not months to master instead of the several days he does for most.
I was decently impressed that Burroughs did a good treatment on how gravity would play out on Mars. John Carter, the protagonist, turns out to be much stronger and can jump much higher than the local inhabitants of Mars.
The one scene that dates the book for me (so much is dated though) is a big battle towards the end of the book. We first have an aerial battle much in the manner of how a naval battle would go with the added use of the third dimension and then they basically disembark and continue fighting on land. If this had been written after WW2 he would have realised that they could have used their air supremacy to bomb the enemy forces on the ground rather than leave their airships to fight the horde.
It will be interesting as I read through this hundred years of science fiction which authors manage to transcend their time and which are still beholden to it.