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Original Title: Tarnsman of Gor
ISBN: 0809556154 (ISBN13: 9780809556151)
Edition Language: English
Series: Gor #1, Gor - kroniky protizemÄ› #1
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Tarnsman of Gor (Gor #1) Paperback | Pages: 160 pages
Rating: 3.42 | 3933 Users | 354 Reviews

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Tarl Cabot has always believed himself to be a citizen of Earth. He has no inkling that his destiny is far greater than the small planet he has inhabited for the first twenty-odd years of his life. One frosty winter night in the New England woods, he finds himself transported to the planet of Gor, also known as Counter-Earth, where everything is dramatically different from anything he has ever experienced. It emerges that Tarl is to be trained as a Tarnsman, one of the most honored positions in the rigid, caste-bound Gorean society. He is disciplined by the best teachers and warriors that Gor has to offer…but to what end?

This is the first book of John Norman's popular and controversial Gorean Saga, a series of novels the author began in 1967 with Tarnsman of Gor and are now considered cult classics.

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Title:Tarnsman of Gor (Gor #1)
Author:John Norman
Book Format:Paperback
Book Edition:Anniversary Edition
Pages:Pages: 160 pages
Published:May 1st 2006 by Wildside Press (first published 1967)
Categories:Fantasy. Science Fiction. Fiction. Adult Fiction. Erotica. Adventure. BDSM. Science Fiction Fantasy

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Ratings: 3.42 From 3933 Users | 354 Reviews

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Tarnsman of Gor was the first in the Gor series. It's been so long since I read these books. I remember raised eyebrows and judgmental looks from the librarians as I checked these out. They are a product of their time. They're sexist and a bit silly, especially in later books. The first book, despite the Frank Frazetta cover, was not really about slavery, etc. It was a good sword and sandal story told through the eyes of Tarl Cabbot. I had just started getting into the DC's multi-verse and was

The Gor books have a bad rep for being horribly sexist, and many of them are. However, the entire series doesn't deserve to be slammed with that label, and some of the books are quite good heroic fantasy.Tarnsman of Gor is the first one in the series and has very little in it about slavery, certainly no more than is mentioned in other Sword & Planet novels. This book gets Tarl Cabot transported to Gor, the Counter-Earth, which rotates around the sun exactly opposite of Earth and is therefore

I can't remember these books very well other than they were horribly sexist and I had to hide from my Mom when I read them. I think if I went back to read them again I'd be shocked and horrified, so I will leave it to my teenage affection and not sully the memory of enjoying the smut.

[. The following was discovered by investigators at the scene of the Tarnsman Incident in late April, 2011. The narrative report is reproduced in its entirety and a transcription of the audio recording made by Officer Honcho is reproduced to the extent possible...]GOODREADS LITERARY POLICE REPORTCASE No. TBDOFFICER: Mike HonchoDATE: April 29, 2011NARRATIVE REPORT (Draft only....not for official release)At approximately 06:15 am, I was shaking down hookers on routine patrol on Robert E.

I never intended to revisit the Gor series--there are certain things that shouldn't leave one's awkward adolescence--but the copy brazenly offering itself at the library book sale (that flesh-pit of wayward pages) got me wondering. Is it apparent from the onset what direction the later books would be going? Is Norman's freak flag flying here, or is he still busy toiling away on it in his basement?These are questions that utterly ruin a reading of escapist, possibly disposable, literature. The

I read these in the early 1980s as a young teen. I have very little memory of them but I do recall that although the series is infamous for being a misogynist S&M epic, that's something that develops over the course of the first 8 or so volumes. This first book, as I recall, has almost none of that, other than the fact that many women in this society are enslaved.My memory is that the writing delivered the story in an engaging manner and it was a decent swords & technology (but mainly

Ok...this one was surprisingly good. Like. GOOD. Yes there's a lack of real description, character emotions, and the pace was fast. But dammit, I LIKED it. It was short and refreshing. I know lots of readers are like "boo slavery of woman", etc, and I can't agree. We're comparing our own morals to that of the counter earth, where it's morals are much countered to ours. And Tarl admitted it was unseemly, and pret-ty sure that he didn't keep a slave himself, if not only faking it for the woman he