EDGAR RICE BURROUGHS ILLUSTRATED BIBLIOGRAPHY
Volume 0865
Presents

TARZAN JR.
One-of-a-kind miniature (1" x 1") book created by ERB in summer 1937
"To Colleen Moore with best wishes Edgar Rice Burroughs, Tarzana, 1937"
"To Colleene Moore with Sincere regards  John Coleman Burroughs (illustrator)"


PUBLISHING HISTORY (USA)
PULP
No pulp release
FIRST EDITION
Edgar Rice Burroughs created by hand  ~ 21 pages illustrated ~ 1937
        Only one copy in existence in Colleen Moore's Miniature Fairy Castle in The Museum of Science & Industry in Chicago
        John Coleman Burroughs & Edgar Rice Burroughs: hand-coloured illustrations on facing pages
REPRINT EDITIONS
ERB News Dateline fanzine No. 24 ~ Mike Conran editor ~ b/w photos reproduced ~ November 1986
 
For detailed information see:Robert Zeuschner's
ERB: The Exhaustive Scholar’s and Collector’s Descriptive Bibliography
Dial 1-800-253-2187 to order a copy from McFarland for $46.50

Colleen Moore's Fairy Castle Project
Featuring Tarzan Jr.
Colleen Moore's position as one of the most popular actresses in Hollywood gave her the resources to produce a "Fairy Castle" of fantastic proportions. Beginning in 1926, Moore enlisted the help of many talented professionals to help her realize her vision. In 1937 she asked ERB for a few words from a Tarzan book and an autograph to add to her miniature Fairy Castle Collection at The Museum of Science and Industry in Chicago. What was returned to her was an original fable featuring a princess and Tarzan, Jr. written by ERB and illustrated by ERB and John Coleman Burroughs. The unusual thing about this story is that it was printed, by hand, in a one-of-a-kind, one inch by one inch, miniature book.


THE ORIGIN OF THE FAIRY CASTLE
http://www.msichicago.org/exhibit/fairy_castle/history1.htm
Colleen Moore was always fascinated by dolls and doll houses. She owned several elaborate doll houses as a child, but later in life her father, Charles Morrison, suggested that she should pursue her passion for miniatures and doll houses by creating the "doll house" of her dreams. Her position as one of the most popular actresses in Hollywood gave her the resources to produce a "Fairy Castle" of fantastic proportions. Begining in 1928, Moore enlisted the help of many talented professionals to help her realize her vision. Horace Jackson was an architect and set designer who worked for First National Studios. Jackson created the floor plan and layout of the castle with this basic idea, "The architecture must have no sense of reality. We must invent a structure that is everybody's conception of an enchanted castle." Moore also enlisted the help of art director and interior designer Harold Grieve. Grieve had designed the interiors for Moore's real-life mansion, so he was a natural to create the interiors of her fantasy castle. By 1935 over 700 individuals had lent their expertise including surgical instrument lighting specialists, Beverly Hills jewelers and Chinese jade craftsmen. The price tag for this 8'7" x 8'2" x 7'7" foot palace containing over 2000 miniatures was nearly $500,000. 
Room Tour



ART GALLERY



Complete Text and More Illustrations are Featured in ERBzines 0042 and 0288
ERB's Rarest Book Showcased in Colleen Moore's Miniature Fairy Castle
http://www.erbzine.com/mag0/0042.html
A Proppian Analysis of "Tarzan Jr." By David "Nkima" Adams
http://www.erbzine.com/mag2/0288.html


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