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SHEENA PULP MAGAZINE SHORT STORIES |
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A COMPARISON
The volume of Sheena short stories, compared to
her appearances in comics, television and film, is extremely slim.
Anyone wanting to read Sheena comics can easily satisfy their
desire. Fiction House published 167 issues of Jumbo
Comics between September 1938 and March 1953. Every
one featured a Sheena story and nearly every one of them displayed
Sheena prominently on the cover. Fiction house also gave the
blonde jungle queen her own title and 18 issues of Sheena
were published from 1942 to 1953 (read the full story on the Fiction
House Comics page). Representations of Sheena in live action
film are also reasonably common. Irish McCalla played Sheena
in 26 episodes of Sheena
Queen of the Jungle, a television series that screened for
about a decade commencing in 1957. Sheena returned to television
in October 2000 and 35 episodes of Sheena,
starring Gina Lee Nolin, were screened over two seasons,
concluding in February 2002. Contrary to popular belief,
there have also been two Sheena feature films. It is
widely believed that Tanya Roberts has the distinction of appearing
in the only feature film to portray the female jungle heroine - Sheena
(1984). However, the Nassour Brothers, producers of the Irish McCalla
TV series, edited together three episodes of that series into a feature
called Queen of the Jungle, which received minimal cinema release
in the US and Europe in the late Fifties (for more details see the
Sheena
Queen of the Jungle page). When we come to tallying
up the total number of Sheena short stories, however, we only have
four to choose from. Three of them appeared in a volume
called Stories of Sheena Queen of the Jungle, published by
Real Adventures Publishing in 1951 (see image below). Her last
appearance in the pulps was Sword of Gimshai, which appeared
in the Spring 1954 issue of Jungle Stories (see image
below). The image depicted at left is the cover of the Athenian
Readers Club reprint of that story (date unknown) (Carr). |
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STORIES
OF SHEENA QUEEN OF THE JUNGLE |
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This fascinating and rare collectors
item was published in the spring of 1951. It contains three full Sheena
adventures - The Slave-Brand of Sleman Bin Ali, Killer's Kraal
and Sargasso of Lost Safaris - all supposedly written by James Anson Buck.
This name, like the names of many pulp writers, is probably a pseudonym. There
are no references to any other works by this author on The Internet.
In his brief essay on Sheena in the pulp magazines, The Indispensable
Jungle Queen, Nick Carr tells us that according to one of the stories
in this volume, Sheena was born in the village of the Abamas, somewhere
in the Congo and she was the orphaned daughter of a white explorer. After
her parents had died she was adopted by a female Abama shaman named N'bid
Ela, who committed herself to teaching the young girl her craft so that
when she died Sheena would be the Matsyenda, or Wise-Woman, of the Abamas,
and the tribe would obey her. N'bid Ela told Sheena that she was of
the "Tribe of God", which she interpreted to mean that her parents
were missionaries. The old woman told Sheena that it was important
that she live apart from the the other Abama villagers because, "Your
skin is white, little one. You too are of the Tribe of God and it
is not good for you to play with the black children." N'bid Ela
organised for a hut to be built for herself and Sheena deep in the forest
and the young girl was raised by the old shaman as if she was some kind
of high priestess in training. N'bid Ela tutored Sheena in the secrets
of her own "dark wisdom". |
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At last Sheena was brought into
the village for the Day of Testing, which was the occasion when all of the
young men of the Abama clan came together to prove themselves fit for war
and wedlock. Sheena's abilities in all of the tests surpassed those
of all of the young men. Her archery skills and her mastery of the
spear exceeded those of her rivals, and on foot she was much swifter and
more agile than her male peers. Eventually her reputation spread far
beyond the villages of the Abamas. She spoke fluent Swahili, she could
understand the jungle drums and she became a familiar sight to many tribes
in the region. She also developed a rapport with many wild creatures
over a vast area. Her dwelling place was a hut on stilts five feet
(152 cm) above the ground deep in the heart of the Congo, which she shared
with a chimpanzee named Chim, her constant companion. Her other jungle
friends were a powerful, black-maned lion named Sabor and a great elephant
named Tamba. This is Nick Carr's paraphrased description of her: |
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The jungle people
called her "Tioto Nomi", or "The Forest
Woman". Sheena was a golden-haired goddess
of the jungle, a bronzed beauty who possessed a superb
figure. Tall and slim with blue eyes, "her
leopard skin clung to her torso, showing every graceful
curve." She also wore earrings and a light
bracelet of pure gold. She usually carried a bow
of nahete wood, a quiver of arrows, and an ivory-hilted
Arab poniard. Such were her weapons, plus quick
reflexes and vast jungle wisdom. |
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| In all three stories Sheena is
involved with a man named Richard "Rick" Thorne. He
is tall, has black hair, grey eyes, a deep resonant voice and
is handy with a gun. He grew up in Montana and when he
is first introduced he is at an isolated training post on the
Portugese side of the Kuango River. There is a degree
of sexual tension between Sheena and Rick, as indicated by the
following exchange when they first meet: |
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"When I first saw
you I thought I was dreaming." Rick confided.
"Are women with white skin so strange to you?"
She held his gaze as the snake holds the bird's
which it will soon devour. She knew she had power
over this man, yet there was a recklessness, a wildness
abut him that she could not help but see. Here was
a spirit as strong and free as her own. |
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| Inevitably, Sheena must rescue Rick from the
many threats and dangers of the jungle. In one sequence
he is lashed to a large-trunked bamboo tree with strips of rawhide
as a feast for a pack of wild hyenas: |
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A slim tawny
figure came down from the treetops abruptly. Sheena!
Her limbs glistened with the jungle rain and even
as she struck the ground she began to slash about with
her Arab poniard. The hyenas screamed and, and tried
to scuttle away. Sheena picked up the largest of them
bodily and threw him at the others. Seconds later
the carrion-eaters had disappeared completely. |
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It is interesting to examine some of the the
elements described above. Chim, Sheena's companion, was obviously
carried over from the Fiction House Jumbo Comics, but the names of
Sheena's other animal friends - Sabor and Tamba - are very curious. In
the Tarzan
novels Edgar Rice Burroughs invented a fictitious language of the apes
that his jungle hero used to communicate with his family and other apes.
In that language Sabor meant female lion and Simba was the male equivalent.
Here it is used for a black-maned male lion. Readers
familiar with Tarzan novels would have recognised it immediately. As
for Sheena's elephant friend Tamba, it is obvious that the name was appropriated
from the Jungle Jim films that Johnny Weissmuller began making
in 1948, a few years before this story was written, after he quit the Tarzan
films. Tamba was the name of Jungle Jim Bradley's comical chimpanzee
companion in those films. It is also interesting that the author of
the Sheena pulp stories decided to change the name of the male in Sheena's
life to Rick. Sheena's sidekick in the Jumbo Comics was a white
hunter named Bob Reynolds, who in some stories was referred to as Sheena's
"mate". In the Irish McCalla series he was known as
Bob Rayburn and in the Jungle Stories pulp he was Bob Reilly
(see below). Whatever his name, in all of these genres threats to
Sheena's male companion became the vehicle that triggered Sheena into action.
In the pulps, however, the sexuality became much more overt. The
pulps were targeted at the adult male market and the pulp authors were given
free license, within reason, to stimulate the imaginations of that segment
of the populace. |
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JUNGLE STORIES - Spring 1954 |
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Several years later another Sheena pulp story
appeared in a long-running pulp named Jungle Stories. Jungle Stories
was a Fiction House pulp publication that began in Winter 1938
and eventually gave rise to one of the more famous Fiction House comic titles
- Jungle Comics. Meanwhile, Sheena was appearing as a regular
feature in the most famous Fiction House comic, Jumbo Comics,
which commenced publication in September 1938 (see the Fiction
House page). The featured hero in this pulp title was a Tarzan
clone named Ki-gor, who became Ka'a'nga in Jungle Comics. The
very last issue of Jungle Stories, published in Spring 1954,
featured a Sheena pulp story called Sword of Gimshai, attributed
to Joseph W. Musgrove. This story cranks up the carnal quota
a few notches.
Many elements established by the tales in Stories of Sheena Queen of
the Jungle are maintained in this work. Sheena makes reference
to her parents being from the Tribe of God and being raised by an old Abama
witchwoman, and Chim the monkey, Sabor the male lion and Tamba the elephant
are all on hand to obediently follow the commands of their mistress. However,
all of Sheena's previous experience with the opposite sex have been completely
forgotten. When she meets Bob Reilly she tells him that she has never
been around any men of her own kind and it had not occurred to her that
he might, or might not, like her. Bob Reilly was another good
looking guy. He was tall, broad-shouldered with "the diving,
high-stepping gait of a football fullback." He had black, unruly,
tangled hair, a square-jawed face which gave him a deceptive look of maturity
for his 23 years, and he was the son of a very wealthy American. Not
surprisingly, the sexual tension between them soon develops: |
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"You
mean," Sheena picked her words slowly. "That
you find it good to look upon me?"
"Anyone would say that you are unusually beautiful."
He said with enforced calm |
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| At one stage in
the story Bob and Sheena have a moonlight swim while waiting
for their food to cook. Sheena was already swimming
when Bob awoke from a long sleep after their adventures
of the day. Sheena invites him into the water and
is very impressed by his swimming abilities. They
discuss some of the events of the day and Sheena suddenly
remembers the food on the fire: |
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Before
he could move , she had thrust her feet against
the river floor and stood up. He realised
for the first time that she swam unclad and her
suddenly revealed beauty made his breath catch in
his throat. Her bare body was a picture of
Aphrodite rising from the sea.
Sheena waded to the bank. With a child's innocence,
she stood there smoothing the glistening drops of
water from her body with her hands. After
leisurely donning her halter and shorts, she walked
across to the fire, inspected the joint of meat
cooking over the crossbars.
When Sheena called him to eat, Bob dressed hurriedly
in the shadow of a tree and joined her near the
fire. |
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| The following day Bob finds himself at
close quarters with Sheena following an argument about
whether he should continue on alone with his plans, and
we are treated to the following scene in glorious pulp
fiction language: |
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She was very close to him. The
changeful blue depths of her eyes softened, losing
the storminess of a moment before. The warm
girl scent of her came up to Bob.
He watched the curve of her full, red lips. Her
teeth were small and fine and white. He had
never known any woman who stirred him as much as
she did. |
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Suddenly the tight
control he had exerted over himself snapped. Before he
knew what he did, he reached his arms about her and pressed
his mouth to hers.
The startled girls eyes flew wide. She stiffened as though
either to fight or run. But she let him draw her into
his embrace, made no attempt to take her mouth from his.
Abruptly he released her, but he could not move away because
she held him with the rigidness of her arms about his neck.
"I'm sorry Sheena. I shouldn't have done that. II
didn't mean to do it." He was embarrassed and angry
with himself.
Sheena slid her arms about his neck and stepped back. The
strange startled expression was still on her face. Her
right hand came up to touch her mouth.
"Why did-what did you do?" she faltered.
Bob frowned, momentarily puzzled. Then he was more embarrassed
than ever. Sheena had no idea what a kiss was.
"I kissed you." He said. And then he didn't
know what to say next.
"But why?" she demanded.
"Uh-well, I just couldn't help myself. His face reddened. "Among
our people, when a man..." That didn't sound right.
"It's a custom. It-it means-no, that's not
what I want to say." He bumbled on in a growing confusion
of unfinished sentences.
"You mean," Sheena asked "that among people with
white skin it is like when a native man rubs noses with a girl?"
"Yes." He granted comfortably. He considered
how swiftly feminine instinct had taken her to the heart of
the matter.
"I have seen them," she said thoughtfully. She
touched her lips with her fingers. "This is a strange
thing this 'kiss', very strange." Then slowly she
smiled and nodded her head. "But it is far better
than the natives custom. First, there was the firestick
which kills at a distance, then the superior way of swimming,
and now this matter."
"Then you aren't angry with me?" ventured Bob.
She contemplated him gravely. "No," she said
softly. "I should like you to do it again, now when
I wouldn't be so surprised."
Bob swallowed heavily. "Not now.,' he declared. His
breath came very fast. "No, not now." He
might have proved himself a sorry kind of man by making a mess
of his expedition, he told himself, but he'd be damned if he
was sorry enough to take advantage of Sheena's innocence. She
had saved his life. The least he could do was to behave
himself." |
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Nick Carr makes an interesting comparison of
the passage above with a description of a similar incident in The Slave-Brand
of Sleman Bin Ali, from the earlier publication. A difference
in the approach of the two authors demonstrated that Sheena's receptiveness
to the advances of the opposite sex had changed dramatically in the intervening
years: |
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She saw the startled look
come into his eyes, and then his arms were about her, his kiss hot
on her lips. In sudden alarm she stiffened in his arms and tried
to push him off. But he only tightened his grip about her waist,
and his arms were strong, crushing her to him.
She felt the will to resist slipping from her; and half in anger,
half in terror, she snatched the knife from her belt and drove the
point in the fleshy part of his forearm.
With a startled cry he released her. She jumped back and stood
glaring at him.
"You-you witch!" he exclaimed. "You asked for
that, and I'll tame you if it's the last thing I do on this earth!"
"Stand back from me!" she warned. "I am sorry
for that , but you would not let me go."
"In a jungle garden I plucked a flower and a thorn drew my blood."
He said. "That's an old Swahili saying."
"Do not pluck another." She said. "Abama spears
are sharper than thorns. Leave this country soon." |
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I wont reveal any more of the details of these
stories in case you want to read them. It is sufficient to say
that Sheena is not the kind of woman that is easily tamed. |
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CONCLUSION |
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The discussion on this page largely revolves
around Sheena's attitudes to men. It should be stressed, however,
that these pulp stories, like all good pulp stories, are also stirring tales
of adventure. I have intentionally avoided disclosing any details
of the exciting action scenes contained in these four tales so that readers'
enjoyment of experiencing their favourite jungle heroine in action will
not be diminished. Those familiar with Sheena's exploits in the pages
of Jumbo Comics, the Tanya Roberts movie and the small screen representations
by Irish McCalla and Gina Lee Nolin, and who have not yet acquainted themselves
with Sheena in prose, are in for a rare treat. The link below will
take you to a page where you can access the complete texts of all four stories.
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READ THE STORIES |
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Click on the image at left to go to the
complete text of all four Sheena stories |
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SOURCES
Essay The Indispensable Jungle Queen
by Nick Carr in The Pulp Collector Vol 3 No 3 (Winter 1988) - personal
collection
IMAGES
Cover of the Athenian Readers Club reprint of The Sword of Gimshai
(1960s?) is from my personal collection
Cover of Stories of Sheena Queen of the Jungle, Spring 1951,
was pilfered from an eBay auction item
Cover of Jungle Stories, Spring 1954, was pilfered from an eBay auction
item |
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SHEENA
© is the property of Sony Pictures Corporation
This independent, nonprofit, fan-based analysis of the Sheena material
is copyright © 2006 Paul Wickham
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