Comics Dejah Thoris has appeared in numerous adaptations of the Martian stories, such as in a 1995 storyline of
Tarzan's Sundays comic strip and various comic book series featuring her husband John Carter. She is mentioned in the first issue of
The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen, Volume II during a conversation between John Carter and
Gullivar Jones. She is a prominent character in
Dynamite Entertainment's
Warlord of Mars, based on
A Princess of Mars. The Warworld comic from started in 2010 and ended in 2014 ending with 35 issues. Dejah first appears in issue 6. Dejah Thoris is also the main character of the Dynamite spinoff comic
Warlord of Mars: Dejah Thoris, which ran 37 issues. Set 400 years before
A Princess of Mars, the first story arc portrays Dejah's role in the rise to power of the Kingdom of Helium, as well as her first suitor. The second story arc will depict her as the "Pirate Queen of Mars", other story arcs are: "The Boora Witch", "The Pirate Men of Saturn", "The Rise of the Machine Men", "The Phantoms of Time", and "Duel to the Death". Each were collected into a trade paperback. The entire series is being collected into a series of omnibus volume, the first collecting the first 20 issues. There was also 2 other mini-series, the 4-issue
Dejah Thoris and the White Apes of Mars (2012) and the 12-issue
Dejah Thoris and the Green Men of Mars (2013–14). In the 2018 series
Warriors of Mars, her mother is given as Princess Heru from
Lieut. Gullivar Jones: His Vacation. A new series started in 2019 was written by Dan Abnett then it led to a sequel of that series called Dejah vs John Carter A new series before she met John was announced in December 2022 and is set thousand years before John Carter. Dejah Thoris is the name of a boat that
Professor Xavier is seen on in
Uncanny X-Men #98.
Other novels/short stories/games In Pierce Brown's book
Morning Star, Dejah Thoris is the name of a
dreadnought battleship, which belongs to a character nicknamed Mustang. Dr. Dejah Thoris "Deety" (for D.T.) Carter, née Burroughs, is a protagonist in
Robert A. Heinlein's
The Number of the Beast and
The Pursuit of the Pankera. Burroughs's Dejah Thoris is also referred to in Heinlein's novel
Glory Road by the protagonist when contemplating his female companion, Star. In the story "
Mars: The Home Front" by
George Alec Effinger, Dejah Thoris is kidnapped by the
sarmaks and taken to their
space gun base. John Carter assembles a Barsoomian force to both rescue her and foil the sarmaks' plan to invade
Jasoom. In the earlier prequel short story "
Allan and the Sundered Veil" by
Alan Moore, a 'time lost' Carter sees a vision of himself fighting a Green Martian and winning Dejah Thoris in a "chrono-crystal aleph" (from Jorge Luis Borges's "
The Aleph") In
The Apocalypse Troll by
David Weber, Richard Aston refers to the very human-looking female he has rescued from a sinking UFO as Dejah Thoris. In the
Junot Díaz book
The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao, Oscar describes a neighbor girl as being "so pretty she could have played young Dejah Thoris." In
L. Neil Smith's debut novel
The Probability Broach, scientist Dr. Dora Jayne Thorens is a supporting character. In the board game
ANDROID, one of the six murder suspects, a human woman from the Mars colony, is named Dejah Thoris. In
Battle Angel Alita: Mars Chronicle, volume 7, page 37, one of the spaceships is name Dejah Thoris, in direct reference to the novels.
Films Traci Lords portrayed Dejah Thoris in
The Asylum's direct-to-DVD film
Princess of Mars. In the
Disney film
John Carter, released on March 9, 2012, she is played by
Lynn Collins. In this version, she is the daughter of Tardos Mors, rather than his granddaughter, and is also Helium's leading scientist. Dejah Thoris is the name of the "Belgium Witch of Marwencol" in the documentary
Marwencol, which the film
Welcome to Marwen is based upon, played by
Diane Kruger. ==References==