Gulliver of Mars is a novel written by Edwin L. Arnold. Lieutenant Gulliver Jones, U.S. Navy, unexpectedly arrived on Mars and immediately fell in love with adventure. Because Mars was a world filled with ancient civilizations, wrecked buildings, copper-skinned swordsmen, and strange and amazing creatures. A princess needed to be saved, the River of Death had to be crossed, and a weird prophecy needed to be fulfilled. Here is a long-forgotten interplanetary adventure classic that some science-fiction specialists believe might have served as an inspiration to the legendary Edgar Rice Burroughs. Despite not being a Burroughs book, Gulliver of Mars by Edwin L. Arnold will be a great reading treat for everyone who has ever loved a Barsoom story. The story's hero's quest is not ended once he has found Princess Heru because what he thinks is a comet is wreaking havoc on Mars. The people are dying from the extreme heat and lack of rain, and Gullivar is unable to return with Princess Heru until it does. Gulliver can only help Princess Heru live in this situation, but he is also worried that their independence, which he had achieved, will not be respected once the threat has passed.
English author Edwin Lester Linden Arnold lived from 14 May 1857 to 1 March 1935. The majority of his publications were made under the pseudonym Edwin Lester Arnold. Arnold, the son of Sir Edwin Arnold, was born in Swanscombe, Kent. He spent the majority of his childhood in India, although he later went back to England to study ornithology and agriculture. His first two books, A Holiday in Scandinavia (1877) and BirdLife in England (1887), were published before he started working as a journalist in 1883. His first novel, The Wonderful Adventures of Phra the Phoenician, is the story of a warrior who periodically enters and exits a state of mysteriously suspended animation in order to observe invasions or attempted invasions of England. The illustrious Illustrated London News initially published Phra in 24 installments. The book was then released in the US and the UK. Lieutenant Gullivar Jones of Arnold: His Vacation is regarded as significant for 20th-century science fiction literature because Edgar Rice Burroughs' Barsoom trilogy, which was published six years later, may have been inspired by it.