
Tarzan, the legendary ape-man living in the African jungle, adopts the orphaned lion cub Jad-bal-ja, raising him to become a powerful and loyal companion. Meanwhile, a former housemaid of his devises a scheme to steal the treasures of the lost city of Opar. She engages a Tarzan lookalike to deceive the high priestess of Opar, Queen La, and gain access to the city’s vaults. Tarzan and the Golden Lion first appeared as a serial in Argosy All-Story Weekly in 1922, and was then published as a novel by A. C. McClurg & Co. in March 1923.
Selected chapters for typing
| I: The Golden Lion | 14 Pages | |
| II: The Training of Jad-Bal-Ja | 9 Pages | |
| III: A Meeting of Mystery | 15 Pages | |
| IV: What the Footprints Told | 14 Pages | |
| V: The Fatal Drops | 16 Pages | |
| VI: Death Steals Behind | 17 Pages | |
| VII: “You Must Sacrifice Him” | 13 Pages | |
| VIII: Mystery of the Past | 19 Pages | |
| IX: The Shaft of Death | 13 Pages | |
| X: Mad Treachery | 20 Pages | |
| XI: Strange Incense Burns | 20 Pages | |
| XII: The Golden Ingots | 14 Pages | |
| XIII: A Strange, Flat Tower | 16 Pages | |
| XIV: The Chamber of Horrors | 18 Pages | |
| XV: The Map of Blood | 16 Pages | |
| XVI: The Diamond Hoard | 20 Pages | |
| XVII: The Torture of Fire | 15 Pages | |
| XVIII: The Spoor of Revenge | 15 Pages | |
| XIX: A Barbed Shaft Kills | 17 Pages | |
| XX: The Dead Return | 18 Pages | |
| XXI: An Escape and a Capture | 12 Pages |