"FICTION / General" . . "Books In Motion (Firm)" . . "Tarzan (Fictitious character) Fiction." . . "Tarzan (Fictitious character)" . . "Adventure fiction"@en . . . "Tarzan the untamed"@en . "Tarzan the untamed" . . . . . "Downloadable audio books"@en . . . . . . "Fiction"@en . "Fiction" . . . . . "Audiobooks"@en . "Fantasy fiction"@en . . "Fantasy fiction" . . "Here is the continuing adventure of one of fiction's most dramatic heroes, Tarzan the ape-man. In this new episode, Tarzan has given up his jungle ways and is living contentedly on a farm with his beloved wife Jane, as a wealthy member of British nobility. But when he returns one day from a trip to Nairobi, he finds his farm has been laid to waste by German troops, with no one left alive. In grief and rage, he casts off the veneer of civilization to become once again the primitive ape-man, ranging the country in search of those who killers his mate to mete out to them the vengeance of the jungle. Never has master storyteller Edgar Rice Burroughs so skillfully shown the struggles within the breast of his ape-man hero, who through dozens of adventures and hair-breadth escapes, tracks down his enemies and triumphs in a crashing, action-packed climax."@en . . . . . . "With the speed of the great apes, Tarzan rushed through the jungle toward his home and family. But he was already too late. The marauders had been there before him. His farm was in shambles and no one was left alive. Of his beloved wife there was only a charred, blackened corpse, still wearing the rings he had given her. Silently, he buried the body and swore his terrible vengeance against those who had done this terrible deed. Then he set out grimly to track them, through warring armies, across a vast desert that no man had ever crossed and to a strange valley where only madmen lived."@en . "With the speed of the great apes, Tarzan rushed through the jungle toward his home and family. But he was already too late. The marauders had been there before him. His farm was in shambles and no one was left alive. Of his beloved wife there was only a charred, blackened corpse, still wearing the rings he had given her. Silently, he buried the body and swore his terrible vengeance against those who had done this terrible deed. Then he set out grimly to track them, through warring armies, across a vast desert that no man had ever crossed and to a strange valley where only madmen lived." . . . "Adventure fiction" . . . "FICTION / Action & Adventure" . .