Brother Men: The Correspondence of Edgar Rice Burroughs and Herbert T. Weston FROM THE PUBLISHER
Brother Men is the first published collection of private letters
of Edgar Rice Burroughs, the phenomenally successful author of adventure,
fantasy, and science fiction tales, including the Tarzan series. The
correspondence presented here is Burroughs's decades-long exchange with
Herbert T. Weston, the maternal great-grandfather of this volume's
editor, Matt Cohen. The trove of correspondence Cohen discovered
unexpectedly during a visit home includes hundreds of
items—letters, photographs, telegrams, postcards, and
illustrations—spanning from 1903 to 1945. Since Weston kept carbon
copies of his own letters, the material comprises a record of a lifelong
friendship that had begun in the 1890s, when the two men met in military
school. In these letters, Burroughs and Weston discuss their experiences
of family, work, war, disease and health, sports, and new technology over
a time period spanning two World Wars, the Great Depression, and
widespread political change. Their exchanges provide a window into the
personal writings of the legendary creator of Tarzan and reveal
Burroughs's ideas about race, nation, and what it meant to be a man in
early-twentieth-century America.
The Burroughs-Weston letters trace a fascinatingly interwoven
emotional and business relationship that evolved as the two men and
their wives engaged in joint capital ventures, traveled frequently,
and navigated the difficult waters of child-rearing, divorce, and
aging. Brother Men includes never-before-published images,
annotations, and a critical introduction in which Cohen explores the
significance of the sustained, emotional male friendship evident in
the letters. Rich with insights related to visual culture and media
technologies, consumerism, the history of the family, the history of
authorship and readership, and the development of the West, these
letters make it clear that Tarzan was only one small part of Edgar
Rice Burroughs's broad engagement with modern culture.
“As a modern mythmaker and one of the bestselling and most
reproduced writers in English, Edgar Rice Burroughs deserves richer
treatment than he has received, and several tendencies in the study of
American culture—particularly the emphases on empire,
masculinity, and popular culture—suggest that he will be more
and more prominent in scholarly discourse. This book makes Burroughs
accessible to a very broad range of scholars.”—Carlo
Rotella, author of Cut Time: An Education at the Fights
Edgar Rice Burroughs (1875-1950), most well known as the
author of the Tarzan books, was one of the bestselling American
authors of the early twentieth century. Millions of copies of his
books sold during his lifetime.
Herbert T. Weston (1876-1951) was a businessman in Beatrice,
Nebraska.
Matt Cohen is Assistant Professor of English at Duke
University.