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Up To Eleven is being dewicked.


* DeathTrap: The Room of Seven Doors is basically a this trope UpToEleven: six of the seven doors lead to various different death traps, with even more traps inside the room to encourage the victim to try to make an escape. Among these include:

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* DeathTrap: The Room of Seven Doors is basically a this trope UpToEleven: up to eleven: six of the seven doors lead to various different death traps, with even more traps inside the room to encourage the victim to try to make an escape. Among these include:
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In this case, it's more fitting to use the plural form since we're discussing more than one pirate.


* {{Pirate}}: ''Pirates of Venus''.

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* {{Pirate}}: {{Pirates}}: ''Pirates of Venus''.
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* RayGun: Venusians have two types: those that shoot out "R-rays" (which destroy living tissue) and those that fire "T-rays", which destroy everything except a few specific materials), with weapons ranging in size from handheld pistols to naval artillery pieces.

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* RayGun: Venusians have two types: those that shoot out "R-rays" (which destroy living tissue) and those that fire "T-rays", which "T-rays" (which destroy everything except a few specific materials), with weapons ranging in size from handheld pistols to naval artillery pieces.
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** ImpaledWithExtremePrejudice: Another leads to a hallway with dozens of spikes that pop out of the walls when the victim setps on a spring mechanism on the floor.

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** ImpaledWithExtremePrejudice: Another leads to a hallway with dozens of spikes that pop out of the walls when the victim setps steps on a spring mechanism on the floor.
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* AlienPrincess: Duare, GreenSkinnedSpaceBabe, and Princess of Venus. She becomes the LoveInterest of Carson Napier, an Earthling who made it to Venus by mistake. She also expresses dissatisfaction with her people's customs

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* ActionSurvivor: Carson in the early books; he is a novice with most Amtorian weapons and knows next to nothing about the various beasts he encounters, but manages to survive time and time again.



* {{Conlang}}: The series has quite a bit of Amtorian words mixed in with English, with Carson occasionally explaining the nuances of the language to the reader.



** "With all our careful calculation, with all our checking and rechecking, we had overlooked the obvious; we had not taken the Moon into consideration at all."

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** --> "With all our careful calculation, with all our checking and rechecking, we had overlooked the obvious; we had not taken the Moon into consideration at all."



* GenderBlenderName: The men of the Samary tribes have names like Lula, Vyla, and Ellie. This is probably deliberate as the Samaryans seem to flip traditional gender roles (the women are warriors and hunters, while the men make sandals and loincloths). When Carson first meets Lula, Lula finds Carson to be a more feminine name (by Samary standards) than his own.

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* GenderBlenderName: The men of the Samary tribes have effeminate-sounding names like Lula, Vyla, and Ellie. This is probably deliberate as the Samaryans seem to flip traditional gender roles (the women are warriors and hunters, while the men make sandals and loincloths). When Carson first meets Lula, Lula finds Carson to be a more feminine name (by Samary standards) than his own.


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* GuileHero: Carson is just as likely to solve his problems with his wits as he is with a weapon.


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* JackOfAllTrades: Before he leaves Earth, Carson has already worked as an aviator, stuntman, rocket engineer, and astronaut.


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* MeaningfulName: The name of the ship that Carson takes command of in ''Pirates of Venus'' is ''Sofal'', which translates to "Killer", something that Carson notes is highly appropriate for a pirate ship.
** Carson's plane from later in the series is called the ''Anotar'', which translates to "bird ship".


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* TakeAThirdOption: Facing likely death in the Room of Seven Doors, Carson uses a noose suspended from the ceiling to climb up to the rafters, where he discovers a way out of the building he is being kept prisoner in.


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* UriahGambit: Muso, acting jong of Korva in ''Carson of Venus'', is jealous of Taman, the next in line for the throne and a very popular figure with all classes within Sanara. Muso sens him on a dangerous assignment behind enemy lines, which Carson suspects was merely an attempt to take Taman out of the picture.'
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* DeathTrap: The Room of Seven Doors is basically a this trope UpToEleven: six of the seven doors lead to various different death traps, with even more traps inside the room to encourage the victim to try to make an escape. Among these include:
** FedToTheBeast: One door leads to a chamber containing a [[PantheraAwesome beast known as a tharban]].
** ImpaledWithExtremePrejudice: Another leads to a hallway with dozens of spikes that pop out of the walls when the victim setps on a spring mechanism on the floor.
** KillItWithFire: One door leads to a hallway where the victim gets roasted alive.
** TheWallsAreClosingIn: With the added twist that the walls are designed to close so slowly as to be almost imperceptible, drawing out the victim's death as long as possible.
** SnakePit: The main room itself begins filling with dozens of giant snakes within minutes of Carson being locked inside.


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* ExactWords: Skor's undead minions are twice fooled by Carson, Duare, and Nalte because they are too stupid to do anything other than follow his orders to the letter. First, they are told to find look for three people in hiding, but Carson in the girls fool them by [[HiddenInPlainSight sitting out in the open]]. The second time, after the undead discover the trio have been disguised as elderly people, the heroes simply ditch their disguises and walk right past them.


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* FantasticFaunaCounterpart: Carson frequently likens the tharban to a lion.


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* GirlInTheTower: Nalte in ''Lost on Venus''.


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* HairOfGoldHeartOfGold: Carson, being the only blonde on the entire planet of Venus and the hero of the series.
* HappinessInSlavery: Former slave Zog admits to Carson that he had more freedom as a slave with a benevolent master than as a supposedly free man under Thorist rule, and would willingly go back to being a slave if he could choose his master.


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* InevitableWaterfall: When their efforts to cross the aptly-named [[IDontLikeTheSoundOfThatPlace River of Death]] in a crude raft fail, Nalte informs Carson that Skor mentioned a waterfall not far downstream from where they are. Subverted in that they manage to get ashore before they ever see the falls, though they are close enough to hear it.


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* MortonsFork: Prisoners accused of treason by the [[ANaziByAnyOtherName Zanis]] are given the option to confess, in which case they are executed for teason. If not, they are executed for impeding justice.
* MsFanservice: Duare is certainly an InUniverse example. According to Carson, most people they meet are startled by her beauty.


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* RayGun: Venusians have two types: those that shoot out "R-rays" (which destroy living tissue) and those that fire "T-rays", which destroy everything except a few specific materials), with weapons ranging in size from handheld pistols to naval artillery pieces.
* RebelliousPrincess: Duare occasionally shows elements of this, admitting to Carson that she has grown tired of her people's customs forcing her to live in isolation from the rest of the world until she comes of age.


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* SpiritualAntithesis: To Burroughs' earlier PlanetaryRomance series, Literature/JohnCarterOfMars. Whereas John Carter was a former soldier who ends up on Mars through no action of his own, Carson Napier is a GentlemanAdventurer that reached Venus with a rocket of his own design. Due to Mars' lower gravity, John is the WorldsStrongestMan on his adopted home on top of being a MasterSwordsman, allowing him to cleave his way through hordes of enemies, whereas Carson is more of a GuileHero with no superhuman abilities. Both men have eternal youth, but Carson aquired his from a Venusian doctor, while John's youth is never explained, as even he has no idea how old he is. Mars is a vast desert and implied to be a dying world, while Venus is covered with vast seas and lush forests. The Martians are shown to be aware of Earth and its inhabitants, while Venusians, living beneath a perpetually cloudy sky, have no concept of anything beyond their own atmosphere.


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* TinyGuyHugeGirl: The Samaryan people consist of [[AmazonBrigade large Amazonian women]] and short, frail men.
* UnintentionalBackupPlan: Carson's original plan is to travel to Mars, but he immediately gets thrown off-course by the Moon's gravity and is flung other direction. By pure chance, he manages to land on Venus, which is home to a race of humanoid aliens not unlike what he was hoping to find on Mars.


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* WhatMeasureIsANonhuman: Most of the people of Amtor (Carson included) don't seem to think of the [[BirdPeople klangan]] as anything more than birds that can talk.
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* SolarSystemNeighbors: The Amtorians.
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No longer a trope


* EverythingsBetterWithPrincesses: Duare of Vepaja.
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** Carson refuses to kill a barely conscious and completely helpless Skor, despite Skor being a CompleteMonster.

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** Carson refuses to kill a barely conscious and completely helpless Skor, despite Skor being a CompleteMonster.foul necromancer.
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* HiddenInPlainSight: While hiding from Skor’s undead minions among a group of elderly living people, Carson, Duare, and Nalte use makeup to make themselves appear older. When the undead search the house they are in, they make no effort to hide and the undead (not being remotely intelligent) hardly pay attention to them as they’re so focused on looking for hidden persons.

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* HiddenInPlainSight: While hiding from Skor’s undead minions among a group of elderly living people, Carson, Duare, and Nalte use makeup to make themselves appear older. When the undead search the house they are in, they make no effort to hide and the undead (not being remotely intelligent) hardly pay attention to them as they’re so focused on looking for hidden ''hidden'' persons.



* The River of Death, which separates Havatoo and Kormor. So named because of the InevitableWaterfall just downstream of the two cities.

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* IDontLikeTheSoundOfThatPlace: The River of Death, which separates Havatoo and Kormor. So named because of the InevitableWaterfall just downstream of the two cities.
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* HonorBeforeReason: Arguably one of Carter's biggest flaws:
** Despite being a novice with an Amtorian sword, Carson insists on engaging the captain of the ''Sovong'' in a swordfight rather than shoot him after he’d disarmed the captain of his pistol. Carson spends the entire fight on the defensive and only wins by pure luck.
** Carson refuses to kill a barely conscious and completely helpless Skor, despite Skor being a CompleteMonster.
** Carson begins to get suspicious about the message Muso tasks him with delivering, but continues his assignment out of a sense of duty. Only when he learns that Muso has ties to Mephis, the leader of the Zani, does he finally see fit to read the message and discover Muso’s treachery.
* HorribleJudgeOfCharacter: Carson puts a man he just met in charge of single-handedly guarding a very valuable political prisoner. Even when Carson walks in on the pair of them behaving suspiciously, Carson gives the man the benefit of the doubt until the pair of them escape with Duare


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* The River of Death, which separates Havatoo and Kormor. So named because of the InevitableWaterfall just downstream of the two cities.
** Kormor itself is sometimes referred to as the City of the Dead.


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* ImprobableAimingSkills: Carson shoots a fleeing animal from the cockpit of his airplane with a pistol.
* LanguageEqualsThought: Discussed; because the skies of Venus are perpetually cloudy, the Venusians have no concept of anything beyond their own atmosphere and thus no words to describe things like the sun, space, stars and planets. Carson finds it difficult to convince people that he is from another planet.
* MartialPacifist: Carson always gives his opponents the opportunity to surrender peacefully, and makes it a point of emphasis that he will not tolerate his men engaging in needless slaughter. He also refuses to kill an unarmed and unconscious man, even when he is completely justified in doing so.
* MasculineGirlFeminineBoy: The Samaryan people consist of brutish, Amazonian women and frail, timid men.


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* NoKillLikeOverkill: The Room of Seven Doors runs on this trope, given that six of the seven doors lead to [[DeathTrap death traps]], six of the seven different foods and drinks in the room are poisoned, all of the furniture in the room is embedded with metal spikes, snakes are released into the room within minutes of the prisoner being locked inside, and there is a noose hanging from the ceiling in case the condemned would rather take their own life rather than deal with any of the unpleasant deaths that await them behind the doors.
* NotQuiteDead: Kamlot is bitten by a targo on Carson’s first expedition to collect tarel and apparently dies. Carson carries his body through the trees and down to ground level for the better part of a day, digs a grave and is about to bury him when he notices that Kamlot is still breathing.
* NothingIsScarier: An in-universe aversion; Carson’s captors take great pains in describing each of the Room of Seven Doors' various death traps contained within, particularly the fifth door, which leads to a room containing a tharban (an animal Carson had never before heard of), with one of the captors even commenting that he thinks it would be more terrifying if Carson knows what it is than if he remains ignorant.
* OlderThanTheyLook: Because the serum of longevity stops the natural aging process, everyone who takes it maintains the appearance of someone in their physical prime, even if they are several hundred years old.
* PantheraAwesome: The tharban, an animal that Carson frequently compares to a lion.
* PermaShave: The Venusians naturally don’t grow any facial hair. Carson accepts a salve from Danus that permanently removes his facial hair after seeing how negatively Duare reacts to the sight of a man with a beard.
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* BadassBookworm: Carson builds a spaceship capable of reaching Venus (originally intended to reach Mars) in the 1930’s with only a few years’ experience in rocketry at most and is able to speak Amtorian conversationally after about three weeks’ worth of tutelage. He is also a former stuntman, single-handedly kills a targo on his first outing into the forest, leads a successful slave uprising after being taken prisoner by the Thorists, and is able to tread water for hours after falling overboard in a storm.


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* CoolPlane: The ''Anotar'' (literally “Bird-ship”), an airplane Carson builds in Lost on Venus using Amtorian technology. It is completely silent, never needs refueling, has retractable wheels and pontoons to land on both land and sea, seats four and can be flown from any of the four seats. During the siege of Sanara, it is converted into a bomber to attack Zani positions.
* DamselInDistress: Duare is almost constantly being captured and needing to be rescued by Carson.
** Nalte also spends the good majority of her appearances either captured or evading capture.
* DeathWorld: Practically every creature Carson encounters is a vicious predator attempting to make a meal of him, and the entire planet is divided into numerous warring factions.


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* TheDreaded: Carson's plane becomes this simply because most Amtorians have no idea what the hell it is and refuse to go anywhere near it.


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* FailedASpotCheck: Carson’s trip to Mars is immediately derailed because he forgot to factor ''the Moon'' into his calculations, and is thrown off-course by its gravitational pull. He even lampshades it:
** "With all our careful calculation, with all our checking and rechecking, we had overlooked the obvious; we had not taken the Moon into consideration at all."
* FateWorseThanDeath: Skor’s undead subjects openly state that they would prefer to return to the oblivion of death over the artificial life that Skor’s experiments gave them.
* GenderBlenderName: The men of the Samary tribes have names like Lula, Vyla, and Ellie. This is probably deliberate as the Samaryans seem to flip traditional gender roles (the women are warriors and hunters, while the men make sandals and loincloths). When Carson first meets Lula, Lula finds Carson to be a more feminine name (by Samary standards) than his own.
* GentlemanAdventurer: After Carson inherits a considerable fortune from his mother (via his great-grandfather), he becomes a pilot and a Hollywood stuntman before travelling the world, learning rocketry in Germany and eventually deciding to build a rocket to carry him into space.


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* GladiatorGames: The city of Havatoo hosts such games at least monthly, with an annual event known as the “Great War Game”: two teams of 100 men armed with swords and shields trying to capture each other’s queen as many times as possible in an hour, like some macabre game of capture the flag. When Carson questions how the normally pacifistic and cultured people of Havatoo can enjoy such spectacle, Ero Shan claims that the city’s lack of conflict necessitates the games to act as outlets for the citizen’s more primal urges.


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* HaveAGayOldTime: When disguised as an Amtorian in Carson of Venus, Carson briefly adopts the alias of Homo Sapiens (Homo for short).
* HiddenInPlainSight: While hiding from Skor’s undead minions among a group of elderly living people, Carson, Duare, and Nalte use makeup to make themselves appear older. When the undead search the house they are in, they make no effort to hide and the undead (not being remotely intelligent) hardly pay attention to them as they’re so focused on looking for hidden persons.
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* CommonLanguage: All of the Venusians speak the same language, though the complexity of their vocabulary differs from one group to the other. The Venusians take this for granted as Carson, who has no idea how an entire planet of independent city-states can have a universal language, asks several scholars about it only to find out they have no idea why an entire language ''wouldn't'' have a universal language.
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* AmazonBrigade: The women of the Samary people do all of the hunting and warfare, kill strange men on sight, and only (barely) tolerate their own men for procreation's sake. Samary men are smaller than their women and rely on them to provide food and protection.
* AnguishedDeclarationOfLove: After spending the entire first novel denying any affection for him, Duare gives one to Carson at the end of ''Pirates of Venus'' when he is facing imminent capture and she is unwillingly being carried to safety by the last surviving angan. Once they are reunited in the following book, she insists that she didn't really mean it.
* ArtificialZombie: Skor's experiments in ''Lost on Venus'' allows him to reanimate dead bodies to act as his subjects.
* BeautyEqualsGoodness: A subversion; the people of Havatoo are uncommonly beautiful and quite pleasant, but this is because they zealously weed out physical and psychological defects from the population. Carson is initially sentenced to death because they are afraid he might contaminate the gene pool generations down the line.
* BirdPeople: The klangan (literally "bird men" in the Amtorian language).
* BoardingParty: Carson's preferred modus operandi as a pirate is to get as close to his target as possible without arousing suspicion and then overwhelm the opposing crew with sheer weight in numbers. This is understandable as his first raid is as much a rescue mission to save Duare as anything else, and most subsequent raids are conducted to capture supplies and valuable prisoners from Thorist ships.
* BodyguardBetrayal: Carson tasks an angan with carrying Duare back to his ship to prevent her from being recaptured by the Thorists. However, because the angan was part of the group that kidnapped Duare from the ship in the first place, he is afraid of being killed by the vengeful crew and instead turns her back over to the Thorists.
* BondVillainStupidity: The Thorists lock Carson in the Room of Seven Doors, a ClicheStorm of death traps, but nobody bothers to monitor the room from the outside to make sure any of them actually work, allowing Carson to find a means of escape.


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* CommonLanguage: All of the Venusians speak the same language, though the complexity of their vocabulary differs from one group to the other. The Venusians take this for granted as Carson, who has no idea how an entire planet of independent city-states can have a universal language, asks several scholars about it only to find out they have no idea why an entire language ''wouldn't'' have a universal language.
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* SocietyOfImmortals: The Vepajans become immortal thanks to an life-extending drug that slows down aging indefinitely.

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* SocietyOfImmortals: The Vepajans become immortal thanks to an a life-extending drug that slows down aging indefinitely.
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Amtor, known on Earth as the planet UsefulNotes/{{Venus}}, is the setting of a PlanetaryRomance series by Creator/EdgarRiceBurroughs, the creator of Literature/{{Tarzan}} and Literature/JohnCarterOfMars. The hero of the series is Earth-man Carson Napier, who travels to Amtor in the first novel of the series, ''Pirates of Venus''.

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Amtor, known on Earth as the planet UsefulNotes/{{Venus}}, is the setting of a PlanetaryRomance series by Creator/EdgarRiceBurroughs, the creator of Literature/{{Tarzan}} ''Literature/{{Tarzan}}'' and Literature/JohnCarterOfMars.''Literature/JohnCarterOfMars''. The hero of the series is Earth-man Carson Napier, who travels to Amtor in the first novel of the series, ''Pirates of Venus''.
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[[quoteright:204:http://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/pirates_of_venus.jpg]]
[[caption-width-right:204: The first novel of the series.]]
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* EverythingIsBetterWithPrincesses: Duare of Vepaja.

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* EverythingIsBetterWithPrincesses: EverythingsBetterWithPrincesses: Duare of Vepaja.



* {{Stripperific}}: Any Amtorian (Venusian), male or female, will wear a belt and weapons harness (male), jewelry (female) and that's pretty much it. Even when they're going into battle.

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* {{Stripperific}}: {{Stripperiffic}}: Any Amtorian (Venusian), male or female, will wear a belt and weapons harness (male), jewelry (female) and that's pretty much it. Even when they're going into battle.
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* VenusIsWet: Amtor is an oceanic world with a tropical climate.
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Amtor, known on Earth as the planet UsefulNotes/{{Venus}}, is the setting of a PlanetaryRomance series by Creator/EdgarRiceBurroughs, the creator of Literature/{{Tarzan}} and Literature/JohnCarterOfMars. The hero of the series is Earth-man Carson Napier, who travels to Amtor in the first novel of the series, ''Pirates of Venus''.

Burroughs completed four novels in the series, each of which was published as a magazine serial before being collected in book form. He began work on a fifth in the early 1940s but abandoned it in favor of working as a war correspondent when the USA entered World War II. The completed first section of the novel was published as a short story after his death.

# ''Pirates of Venus'' (magazine 1932, book 1934)
# ''Lost on Venus'' (magazine 1933, book 1935)
# ''Carson of Venus'' (magazine 1938, book 1939)
# ''Escape on Venus'' (magazine 1941, book 1946)
# "The Wizard of Venus" (1964)
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!!This series contains examples of:

* TheAgeless: The people of Vepaja are ageless thanks to an anti-aging serum.
* CanonWelding: The series is explicitly part of TheVerse Burroughs had previously established by welding together the Literature/{{Pellucidar}}, Literature/{{Tarzan}}, and Literature/JohnCarterOfMars series, all of which share the premise that Burroughs is acting as an intermediary for the accounts of the heroes. When Carson Napier visits to ask Burroughs to be his intermediary as well, Burroughs is receiving an update on the doings in Pellucidar from Jason Gridley.
* DirectLineToTheAuthor: At the beginning of the series, Burroughs claims to be basing the stories on accounts received telepathically from Carson Napier on Venus (who oddly enough, rarely uses his psychic powers for anything other than giving Burroughs infodumps).
* DoorRoulette: The Room of Seven Doors in ''Lost on Venus''. Only one of the room's doors led to safety; all the others were deathtraps. (Once the jailers brought you in and left, the lights went out and the floor spun for a while so you'd lose track of which was the safe door.) Food and drink were provided -- most of it poisoned. Oh, and to discourage hesitation, after a while dangerous snakes started slithering in.
* EverythingIsBetterWithPrincesses: Duare of Vepaja.
* GiantSpider: The targo which are native to Venus. The Venusians gather their webs, called tarel, which has thousands of uses.
* GreenSkinnedSpaceBabe: Duare of Vepaja, the Venusian princess and Carson Napier's love interest.
* HumanAliens: The people of Vepaja slightly resemble Middle-Easterns on Earth.
* ImmortalProcreationClause: The Vepajans consume an anti-aging serum that extends their lifespan and allows them to live indefinitely. Half their women are also infertile, and the other half is allowed to breed a limited number of children to avoid overpopulation.
* MightyWhitey: Carson Napier gets thrust into a "savage" environment and thrives.
* MulticulturalAlienPlanet: Amtor is culturally diverse, with at least half a dozen different nations and cultures depicted.
* ANaziByAnyOtherName: The primary villains of ''Carson of Venus'' are the militaristic, dictatorial [[SignificantAnagram Zani]] Party, complete with an incompetent ally from a nearby city named [[UsefulNotes/BenitoMussolini Muso]].
* {{Pirate}}: ''Pirates of Venus''.
* PlanetaryRomance
* SignificantAnagram: The main villains in ''Carson of Venus'' are the [[ANaziByAnyOtherName Zani Party]].
* SocietyOfImmortals: The Vepajans become immortal thanks to an life-extending drug that slows down aging indefinitely.
* {{Stripperific}}: Any Amtorian (Venusian), male or female, will wear a belt and weapons harness (male), jewelry (female) and that's pretty much it. Even when they're going into battle.
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