Tarzan the Terrible
by Edgar Rice Burroughs
Lieutenant Obergatz fled in horror to avenge Tarzan's revenge on the monkeys. And with him, by force, Tarzan's beloved half took Jane. Now the monkey-man has pursued the weak spur of his flights, to an area where no one has entered. The trail passed through the seemingly impenetrable swamps of Pal-ul-Don — a wild country where primitive Vaz-don and Ho-don wield knives with their long, pregensive tails — and where powerful triceratopes were still protected from the dim dawn of time. And far behind, relentlessly chasing after him, the Killer Korak arrived. Tarzan the Terrible is considered dedicated to one of Burroughs' best tales about the ape-man. Here, Tarzan goes to rescue his beloved Jane, who has been kidnapped by Lieutenant Obergattz, but the journey takes her to unbridled and unexplored lands, inhabited from the depths of time by primitive tribes and archaic creatures.