The Burroughs Boom
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Pages from In Part Scal’d: The 1963 Fan Poll Results, published by Dick Eney
Back in the 1960’s, the publishing world experienced a Burroughs boom. Following Edgar Rice Burroughs’ death in 1950, the next decade saw his works fading from public view, with most out of print. That all changed in 1962, when several publishers realized that many of Burroughs earlier works were now public domain. Donald Wollheim of Ace perhaps took the greatest advantage of this, swiftly flooding the market with paperback reprints of Burroughs books, sporting great covers by Roy Krenkel and Frank Frazetta. This caused ERB, Inc. to look into their properties, and they soon inked deals with various publishers to bring out authorized editions of Burroughs’ works, including Ballantine for the Tarzan and Mars series and Ace for the Venus and Pellucidar series.
According to Life magazine, in 1962 the Tarzan novels being reprinted in paperback were runaway best-sellers. That year, Burroughs books sold more than 10 million copies – roughly 1/30th of the total of all paperback sales for the year.
In going through some vintage fanzines and other fan publications a few months ago, I came across a copy of In Part Scal’d: The 1963 Fan Poll Results published by Dick Eney. Inside was a two page article by Dick Lupoff, who recently passed away. Among his other achievements, Lupoff was a significant figure in Edgar Rice Burroughs’ publishing (including through his editorial work at Canaveral Press, which brought many ERB works out in hardcover) and scholarship.