Instead of chasing fake titles, here are legitimate sources for free Tarzan ebooks (legal and safe):
Tarzan was created by Edgar Rice Burroughs in 1912. The early Tarzan books are now in the public domain in many countries (notably the first few novels, including Tarzan of the Apes). However, the name “Tarzan” is still a trademarked property of Edgar Rice Burroughs, Inc. This means anyone can adapt the public domain stories, but they cannot create misleading “adult” versions using the trademark without permission — hence why a title like TarzanX would likely be unauthorized fan work.
In Burroughs’ original novels, Jane Porter is no damsel in perpetual distress. She is:
The word “shame” never defines her. In fact, Burroughs was progressive for his time, allowing Jane to choose Tarzan over societal expectations. So if you find a version where Jane is subjected to “shame” for titillation, you can be certain it’s not authentic and likely produced without rights. tarzanx shame of jane free
Beautifully formatted, free versions of the same public domain titles.
No canonical Tarzan story by Edgar Rice Burroughs carries the title The Shame of Jane. The closest is Tarzan and the Lost Empire (1928) or Tarzan and the City of Gold (1932), where Jane plays a supporting role. However, vintage pulp magazines and later comic book runs from publishers like Dell, Gold Key, and Marvel occasionally featured stories with provocative titles. It’s possible that a 1950s or 1960s comic issue used “shame” in its title to sell copies—but no verified issue exists under that exact name.
If you encountered the phrase “Tarzanx Shame of Jane free” online, it is almost certainly one of three things: Instead of chasing fake titles, here are legitimate
Search for:
All are free, high-quality, and include Jane as a central character.
Shame, as an emotion, plays a role in several Tarzan tales. After Jane marries Tarzan and lives in the jungle, she sometimes feels shame when encountering other Westerners who view her as “fallen” or “primitive.” In Tarzan and the Ant Men (1924), Jane’s dignity is tested when she is captured. In Tarzan, Lord of the Jungle (1928), she is kidnapped, and Tarzan’s violent rescue methods force her to confront the cost of their lifestyle. The word “shame” never defines her
But Burroughs never dwelled on shame as an erotic or degrading force. That interpretation is a modern invention, often found in fan fiction or adult parody. Searching for “Tarzanx Shame of Jane free” with the “x” likely indicates a wish for explicit romance content—which is not part of the original Burroughs canon or any licensed adaptation.
There was an Italian-made adult film series in the 1990s–2000s using “Tarzan” in the title (e.g., Tarzan X: Shame of Jane appears to be a misremembered or fabricated title based on similar adult parodies). Those films are not free legally, nor are they related to Burroughs’ works. No reputable archive lists them as genuine Tarzan media.