So it's odd, since I've loved Zorro stories for almost 20 years, that I'd never read the original story until now. And I'm regretting that, in a way, because I could have been enjoying this book for all these years! It's such a zesty, fun-loving sort of story, exactly what would have pleased me in my teens. Oh well, at least I've read it now!
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Okay, but anyway, the book we know now as The Mark of Zorro was originally a serial in a pulp magazine almost a hundred years ago, in 1919. It was called The Curse of Capistrano, and the story caught the eye of Douglas Fairbanks, Sr., who changed the title to The Mark of Zorro when he made it into a movie. The movie was such a smash that the whole serial was released as a book under his title instead of the original. McCulley went on to write a bunch more books about Zorro, which is kind of surprising since at the end of the original, Zorro reveals his secret identity and declares he's going to get married and settle down, basically. But whatever, sequels of swashbucklers are a good thing and I won't quibble.
I'd put a spoiler warning here, but surely you already know who Zorro's alter-ego is, right? If not, skip this paragraph. Anyway, as I read this, I wondered over and over how it would have worked for people reading it the first time who did NOT know that Diego Vega was also Zorro. It was published in five installments, so there were probably about eight chapters per installment -- did readers realize that the reason Diego got so much page-time was that he was the hero? Or were they like, "Dude, shut up about this annoying mush-brain and get back to the good stuff already!"
Okay, so the basic story is this: back in the early days of California, when the Spanish dons held all the power and the mission priests held all the morality (remember, this is totally fictional), the pueblo of Los Angeles has a bunch of corrupt officials who beat the peasants and mistreat the natives and persecute their enemies and generally behave like Prince John and Sir Guy of Gisborne and the Sheriff of Nottingham in your typical Robin Hood stories. (It so happens that I'm also a major fan of Robin Hood.) This guy in a black mask and cape, deadly with a sword, starts showing up and punishing evildoers. He calls himself Zorro, which is the Spanish word for 'fox.' Lovers of justice applaud him, lovers of easy money do not.
Also, there's this guy named Diego Vega, a young man who makes Sir Percy Blakeney from The Scarlet Pimpernel (a probable inspiration for this story) look like a manly man. He wants to read poetry, he wants to sit in the sunshine and dream, he's fatigued by everything, distressed and annoyed by everything -- and fabulously wealthy. He asks Senorita Lolita Pulido to marry him, whines and fusses when she resents not being courted, and generally is the laughingstock of the pueblo. And, weirdly enough, I actually started to think that his idea of not going through the process of courting, singing outside the senorita's window, not making of a fool of himself -- I thought that sounded rather sensible. I think I would have accepted him.
Unless, like Lolita Pulido, I also had the dashing Zorro making virulent protestations of love every time I turned around.
Anyway, this would never win any prizes for a beautiful writing style, but it's a cracking good story, full of adventure and intrigue, danger and romance. I won't be waiting long before I read it again.
Particularly Good Bits:
"I am the friend of the oppressed, senor, and I have come to punish you" (p. 15).
Don Carlos had proved himself to be a courageous man in his youth, and now he was a wise man also, and hence he knew better than to participate in an argument between women (p. 37).
If This Was a Movie, I Would Rate It: PG for violence and a man menacing a woman.
This is my 8th book read and reviewed for the Mount TBR Challenge, and my 9th for the Classics Club.