The Baryon Review
Reviews of recent and upcoming science fiction, fantasy, horror and other genre related books. Sometimes I'll add something I think will be of interest.
Tuesday, September 2, 2025
New from Dan Brown
The Secret of Secrets
by Dan Brown
The world’s most celebrated thriller writer returns with his most stunning novel yet — a propulsive, twisty, thought-provoking masterpiece that will entertain readers as only Dan Brown can do. In a thrilling race through the dual worlds of futuristic science and mystical lore, Robert Langdon uncovers a shocking truth about a secret project that will forever change the way we think about the human mind. $38 from Penguin Putnam
Monday, September 1, 2025
Farewell to Chelsea Quinn Yarbro
Just got word that Quinn Yarbro has passed over. She was a special person and a great writer. I'm saddend beyond words.
Preorder Trailblazer: The Autobiography of Tarzan's Creator
Preorder Trailblazer: The Autobiography of Tarzan's Creator
🎁 Plus ERB's 150th Birthday Sale! 🎁
Cover art by John Coleman Burroughs
Design by Mike Wolfer
September 1, 2025 (Tarzana, California) – In commemoration of the 150th anniversary of the birth of Edgar Rice Burroughs, who was born on this day in 1875, we are thrilled to announce the upcoming publication of Trailblazer: The Autobiography of Tarzan’s Creator. The 20,000-word “Autobiography,” dictated by Burroughs at the prompting of his book publisher in 1929 for the purposes of promotion, has never before seen print and details in his own words the life of the Master of Adventure from his birth to 1914. A compelling, insightful, and often humorous and self-deprecating account of the man who singlehandedly transformed popular culture with his iconic creations, Trailblazer is the true American success story. Burroughs writes of his days as a schoolboy in Chicago and a cowboy in Idaho; his trials and triumphs as a cadet in the Michigan Military Academy; his service in the 7th U.S. Cavalry chasing the notorious outlaw the Apache Kid in the mountains of the Arizona Territory; and his struggles as a young husband, father, and failed businessman. The “Autobiography” concludes with Edgar Rice Burroughs’ ultimate achievement: the creation of the immortal Tarzan of the Apes and John Carter of Mars, the beloved heroes of his tales of adventure and romance that forever imprinted his presence on global culture.
Trailblazer sheds light on Edgar Rice Burroughs the Man, showing both his doubts and his courage in the face of adversity. Moreover, it counters oft-told and misleading narratives about his views on race, illustrating his sympathetic feelings and respect for the Indigenous peoples he encountered in the American Southwest, and his high opinion of a regiment of Black soldiers quartered at Fort Grant, Arizona, beside and under whom he served while in the cavalry.
Supplementing the “Autobiography” is a 20,000-word profile of the author by noted ERB scholar Henry G. Franke III, picking up where Burroughs’ firsthand account leaves off and covering the remainder of his life and career. Here we see Burroughs metamorphose from a budding author into a successful entrepreneur who launched a worldwide industry of Tarzan film, radio, publishing, licensing, and merchandising, all while he continued to write his highly popular novels. Franke also details how Burroughs could not refuse the call to duty after witnessing firsthand the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, risking the dangers of Pacific Theater as the oldest accredited war correspondent in World War II.
Trailblazer is rounded out by 17 essays by Edgar Rice Burroughs on his extraordinary life and groundbreaking career, including 4 previously unpublished travelogues written with all his trademark wit, humor, and engaging literary style: “The Mono Creek Trip,” “Notes on the Trip to Mono Creek and Porpoise Lake,” “The Eleven-Year Itch,” and “The Death Valley Expedition of the Intrepid Thirty-Threeers.” The book also features copious rare photographs and illustrations from ERB, Inc.’s archives in Tarzana, California, and includes heartfelt forewords by two of Edgar Rice Burroughs’ great-granddaughters, Kathleen Bonnaud and Llana Jane Burroughs, as well as an illuminating introduction by Henry G. Franke III.
Trailblazer: The Autobiography of Tarzan's Creator offers a rare glimpse into the mind of one of the world’s most popular and beloved authors, and will be enjoyed by fans of his fantastical tales, students of literature and history, and anyone interested in reading the captivating life story of a unique and creative soul.
Available in paperback, standard hardcover, and a hardcover limited Collector's Edition. Expected to ship Winter 2025/2026.
Bonus Trading Card—While Supplies Last!
All preorders of Trailblazer: The Autobiography of Tarzan's Creator placed directly from ERB, Inc.’s online store will come with an exclusive collectible trading card featuring a specially colorized photograph of Edgar Rice Burroughs when he was a cadet in the Michigan Military Academy in 1895. Following the preorder period, this exclusive trading card will continue to be offered with direct orders of the book from our online store while supplies last.
Hardcover Limited Collector’s Edition
The hardcover Collector’s Edition of Trailblazer features:
A commemorative bookplate signed by Edgar Rice Burroughs’ great-granddaughters Kathleen Bonnaud and Llana Jane Burroughs; Edgar Rice Burroughs, Inc., President James Sullos; and Trailblazer coeditors Christopher Paul Carey and Henry G. Franke III, as well as a facsimile signature of Edgar Rice Burroughs
A second exclusive collectible trading card, this one featuring a specially colorized photograph of Edgar Rice Burroughs in 1912, the year Under the Moons of Mars and Tarzan of the Apes were published
Special printed exterior boards
A limited print run of only 300 copies
ABOUT THE AUTHORS
Edgar Rice Burroughs
The creator of the immortal characters Tarzan of the Apes® and John Carter of Mars®, Edgar Rice Burroughs is one of the world’s most popular authors. Mr. Burroughs’ timeless tales of heroes and heroines transport readers from the jungles of Africa and the dead sea bottoms of Barsoom® to the miles-high forests of Amtor™ and the savage inner world of Pellucidar®, and even to alien civilizations Beyond the Farthest Star™. Mr. Burroughs’ books are estimated to have sold hundreds of millions of copies, and they have spawned 60 films and 250 television episodes.
Henry G. Franke III
Henry G. Franke III is the editor of The Burroughs Bulletin, the journal of The Burroughs Bibliophiles, the nonprofit literary society devoted to the life and works of Edgar Rice Burroughs. He was the Contributing Editor and penned the introductions for IDW Publishing’s Library of American Comics four-volume archival series reprinting Russ Manning’s Tarzan newspaper comic strips. Volume 1 won the 2014 Eisner Award for Best Archival Collection—Strips. He also wrote book introductions for IDW’s Tarzan – 1929 daily strip reprints and for Tarzan and the Adventurers, the fifth volume in Titan Books’ Complete Burne Hogarth Comic Strip Library. He has served three times as the Official Editor of the Edgar Rice Burroughs Amateur Press Association (ERBapa). Franke specializes in collecting art inspired by Burroughs’ stories. Franke was in the U.S. Army from 1977 to 2009, and later served as an Army government civilian from 2009 to 2020.
ERB's 150th Birthday Sale!
To celebrate the occasion of Edgar Rice Burroughs' 150th birthday, we are having a site-wide sale! For the entire month of September, use coupon code ERB150 at checkout and receive 20% off every currently available item offered directly from our webstore.* We're so excited about ERB's 150th birthday that the sale even includes a 20% discount on Collector's Editions of our books!
* This sale cannot be combined with any other promotional discount (such as the sale on sets of ERB Authorized Library volumes) and excludes book preorders.
Monday, August 25, 2025
From FILE 770 by MIke Glyer
Guy H. Lillian III (1949-2025)
Posted on August 24, 2025 by Mike Glyer
Guy H. Lillian III, icon and champion of Southern fandom, died August 23 at the age of 75. His father-in-law, Joe Green, announced:
It is my sad duty to inform you that my son-in-law, Guy Lillian III, died last evening.
Many of you know Guy personally, and others thru his long years as a very active fan. He devoted a large part of his life to fandom and fanzines, including putting out two of his own for many years.
Guy had suffered from Parkinson’s for several years. Earlier this year he had two strokes, and also a fall that broke a bone in his back. He has since alternated from hospital to nursing home. His worn-out body finally surrendered completely yesterday.
Lillian was born July 20, 1949. (You might ask, how did Guy arrange to have himself born on the same date that Apollo 11 would later land on the Moon?)
When Guy was 12, he found a copy of The Flash comic in a stack of old magazines at his grandmother’s house. He loved comics, but what really hooked Guy was the issue’s letter column. He told a Nerd Team interviewer in 2018:
…At the time Julie Schwartz was editing Flash, and had a contest going, where the people who sent in the cleverest letters won original artwork and scripts. They can’t do that now. So, what they would do was write unbelievably corny, pun-filled letters. And for some reason Schwartz responded to that, and awarded artwork to these terrible letters. That ticked me off, frankly, because here these guys are getting all these treasures and I didn’t have any of these things, so I got upset about it. I wrote – by hand, on a tiny lined pad (I still remember it) saying that these guys were lousy comedians and he should save his prizes for more worthy efforts. Then I forgot about it.
The next thing I know, I’m living in Riverside, California. I was about 13, I guess and I’m buying Flash #133. It featured the stupidest Flash cover of all time. It showed Flash as a wooden puppet running past a poster of Abra Kadabra, one of his villains, who was shooting a ray out at him. The thought balloon read: “I’ve got the strangest feeling I’m being turned into a puppet!” Ludicrous cover. Anyway, I looked in the letter column and I saw at the very end, I’ll never forget this, “And finally –Guy Lillian—despite himself—is stuck with the original script for ‘Kid Flash Meets the Elongated Man’.” I couldn’t believe my eyes. I leafed through the letter column and found my letter. I raced home, ecstatic. I just couldn’t believe it. Sure enough, they sent me the script….
Guy eventually had 120 letters of comment published in DC Comics. And he received the tribute of having his name attached to the Green Lantern’s 1968 debut character, Guy Gardner. After finishing his MFA degree at the University of North Carolina in 1973, he was offered a job at DC “at the magnificent salary of $100.00 a week to start, which was later raised to an even more magnificent sum, $110.00 a week. In New York City. It was paradise. It was terrific. I had a great time.” (Correspondence signed by DC Comics Assistant Editor Guy H. Lillian III in 1974 has been offered for sale as a collectible on eBay!)
Prior to getting his MFA, Guy earned an undergraduate degree in English from UC Berkeley (1971). During his first year on campus he arranged to meet sf author Jack Vance, who lived in nearby Oakland. He retold the experience in Magicon PR 2 when Vance was a Worldcon GoH (1992).
…The following is a verbatim entry from my diary, 4 November 1967. 1 was 18. I’d just started college at the University of California at Berkeley. I knew nothing. I didn’t even know that it was an act of intolerable rudeness, once you discovered that a for-real professional gee-whiz science fiction writer actually lived near your home, to do as I’d done: call him up and ask if you can come meet him. But I’d done it. And, tiredly, the writer had said sure, come on up.
After an hour or so I had to leave, and Jack had to get back to work on his house. Like him, my generation is tearing down and building up, on the same spot, at the same time. We shook hands outside and Jack apologized in case he’d sounded either “too weird” or “too stuffy.” To me he only sounded intelligent and honest, not “stuffy” at all. “It’s a popular misconception that science fiction writers are weird,” I said. Jack grinned and scratched his thinning thatch of hair. “Well,” he said, “some of them are.”…
At Berkeley he also gained his first experience as an editor working on the college magazine that Terry Carr had edited before him. In fact, Guy contacted Carr and was amazed to receive by return mail xerox copies of all of Carr’s issues: “Which they’ve since lost, and I could cheerfully dynamite them,” he told a panel at the 2001 Worldcon.
Later on Guy studied law at Loyola University of the South in New Orleans, then practiced as a defense lawyer in the field of criminal law in Louisiana, including as a public defender. He wrote serious articles about some of these experiences for his fanzines. He was really a quite wonderful writer who always wore his heart on his sleeve.
As a change of pace, he also wrote a picaresque account for Mimosa, “It Pays to Advertise?”, telling how he and fellow fan and attorney Dennis Dolbear drummed up some business, in the process making national news.
Let me explain a brouhaha which made my friend Dennis Dolbear and I nationally famous — briefly, I hope — at the end of 1996. It was originally my idea: advertise in the home papers of tourists soon to visit New Orleans, some of whom would be bound to get in trouble on the streets of the Crescent City, and need lawyers.
It only makes sense. People flock to New Orleans for events like the Sugar Bowl and Mardi Gras looking for a Good Time. Such people sometimes take their quest for Fun a bit far, and run afoul of the constabulary. To put it bluntly, they get arrested. They need lawyers. Strangely enough, I need something too. Money…
Their advertising strategy attracted an unexpected bonanza of media attention – they were even interview by Sports Illustrated.
A prolific fanwriter, Guy published innumerable apazines, a New Orleans clubzine, the genzine Challenger, perzine Spartacus, and fanzine review index The Zine Dump. Challenger was a 12-time Best Fanzine Hugo finalist (2000-2011), and Guy himself was twice on the ballot for Best Fan Writer (1988-1989). That he never won the rocket was a source of unconcealed frustration. But one very good thing did happen for him at the Chicon 2000 Hugo Losers Party. Right in front of my eyes, Guy and Rose-Marie Green Donovan became engaged. She’s the daughter of Joe Green, and Guy first met her at Joe’s famous Apollo XI landing party, also attended by Heinlein, Clarke, and others. They married on June 30, 2001 in Cocoa, Florida. Guy wrote in advance, “An Atlas-Agena is scheduled to be launched that very evening from nearby Cape Canaveral. As Joe Major says, a good wedding should have fireworks.”
Two years later Guy and Rose-Marie were elected as the 2003 Down Under Fan Fund delegates. On their return from Australia they published their trip report, The Antipodal Route.
Now the reason Guy had been eligible to attend the 2000 Hugo Losers Party was because File 770 won that year. Guy even suggested to me a way to we could inject some fannish humor into the moment, something I unsuccessfully tried to explain years later in my article “How I Won the Hugo and Lost the Civil War”.
It seemed like a funny idea when Guy suggested it. Yes, exactly, it was his idea! No more than 45 minutes had passed since I’d been sitting alongside the other nominees at the 2000 Hugo ceremonies, quietly confident I’d won my last Hugo a decade ago. Then Teddy Harvia had announced my name. I headed for the stage in a fog of not-quite-speechless amazement and someone handed me the rocket on its beautiful wooden base.
After the ceremony I stood happily on the periphery of the collected winners posing for the official Locus photo and traded quips with Michael Walsh. When that broke up and people began to head for the parties, Guy caught my attention and said he thought it would make a funny picture if he stood on the steps of the stage and we pretended to fight over the Best Fanzine Hugo. I felt sure he was right. That’s just the kind of stunt photo that used to crack me up when I edited the front page of my high school newspaper.
Guy went over to Rosy and asked her to take the picture. Alone among the three of us she seemed a bit skeptical that this would be in good taste. She took the photo because Guy asked. Then I practically begged Guy to e-mail me a copy of the picture in time to publish in File 770…
That photo! For Guy’s friends in the South, it changed File 770 from merely another fanzine into The Primary Obstacle to Guy’s Hugo.
And Guy was a beloved Southern fan. In 1984 he won the Rebel Award, given to the fan who has done the most for Southern Fandom. And in 1987 he effectively volunteered as the first winner of the Rubble Award, given to the person who has done the most to Southern fandom. There was a tie vote, which Guy resolved by voting for himself.
Guy H. Lillian III in 2003.
Over the years Guy also wrote heartfelt obituaries for File 770 about close friends when they passed away. And he shared with us his dramatic experience with a tornado in 2004 that we titled, “Nearly Gone With the Wind”:
Guy Lillian III says he had never seen a twister and regretted it. Then on October 29, while the latest in a series of terrible thunderstorms was marching across his section of Louisiana, Guy started driving home from work down the Old Benton Road and got caught in something much stronger and more dangerous than he expected:
“A trashcan lid spun over my hood like a giant frisbee. The rain turned white. The white became opaque. I couldn’t see the road. I hit my emergency blinkers and pulled over, hoping I wouldn’t find a ditch… I remembered some of that twister [documentary]: the sudden white wind tearing hell out of the world. I said to myself, “Hell, I’m in the middle of it,” because I knew what was coming inside that depthless white pall.
“Now I was heading away from the action. I floored Little Red and ran for it…. I turned back to Old Benton Road. The tall sign of one of the car dealerships was twisted like a pipecleaner and leaning. That just happened, I said to myself….”
Guy assures everyone that he came through “Unscathed, both me and car — except for a small crack in the windshield (the car, not me). Found out that the twister was a Force 2. I’m not rattled about it, just … thoughtful.” He did a complete write-up in the next Challenger.
Guy and Rosy moved to Shreveport before Katrina happened in 2005, so they were spared the worst of that disaster. In the next decade they moved to Florida, where Guy taught for awhile as an adjunct instructor of English at Eastern Florida State College.
Guy at Contraflow in 2015. By Infrogmation of New Orleans.
One of Guy’s last projects was gathering material for a Sturgeon-themed issue of his genzine. I wrote what I remembered about attending Ted’s UCLA extension course and sent it to him. I don’t think the issue came out.
However, Guy did keep publishing Spartacus until November 2024. Just about the last thing he said in it was, “I expect December to be a difficult month, crawling with doctors and therapists. Hey, though, today I got my own walker! An early Christmas!” Which still makes me cry. His spirit was so much stronger than his body.
Thursday, August 21, 2025
COMING IN JANUARY, MURDER AT WORLDS END
"A wonderfully clever take on the classic locked-room mystery.... I’ll happily follow foul-mouthed Miss Decima and steadfast Stephen Pike through many more mysteries, their dynamic is utterly delightful."
— Kristen Perrin, New York Times bestselling author of How to Solve Your Own Murder
With the looming passage of Halley’s Comet across the world's skies sparking widespread panic in 1910, the Viscount of Tithe Hall shutters his remote coastal castle in hopes of waiting out the supposed upcoming apocalypse.
But when the Viscount is found dead in his sealed study, it is up to under-butler Steven Pike and sharp-witted Octogenarian and family matriarch Decima Stockingham to outfox a killer.
To celebrate this brilliantly charming, twisty, and irreverent adult debut by #1 New York Times bestselling children's author Ross Montgomery, we're giving away 20 early copies in a Scene of the Crime-exclusive sweepstakes! Click here to enter for your chance to win.
The Murder at World's End goes on sale January 6th. Click here to pre-order your copy.
Monday, August 18, 2025
Bob the Vampire Snail
Bob the Vampire Snail
by Andrea Zuill
Bob was just a regular snail, that is until one fateful night that caused him to become a … vampire?! In this hilarious and heartwarming picture book, join Bob the vampire snail as he embraces his unique love of tomatoes, discovers new and peculiar sleeping talents, and forms an unexpected friendship. $18.99 from Penguin Random House
Thursday, August 14, 2025
Fabricated, A Cybil Lewis Novel
Fabricated, A Cybil Lewis Novel, Nicole Givens Kurtz, Mocha Memoirs Press, 2025.
Cybil Lewis is a Private Investigator in the area that was once Washington, DC.
She is a former District Regulator and still maintains friends in the force, but
she has been known to show them up in solving the cases that end up in her lap.
This time out, she is visited by Agents Lynn and Winsome from the Midwest
Territory and is recruited to aid in their investigation for an escaped
criminal. Nico Mars has been freed from his "Cradle", a stasis unit where he was
receiving psyche therapy. He was convicted of murder, larceny and other
nefarious conduct in Washington. As he was a Regulator in DC, he was moved to
the Midwest District for unknown reasons. It is up to Cybil to find out the
truth of what Nico really did, how he escaped, and why he would come back to DC
and not head for parts unknown. Also adding o the investigation is the death of
a community activist, two attempts on Cybils life and the arson of her wauto.
There are some surprises that are discovered during the investigation. And of
course the wealthy, the lawyers, and the police corruption have to be confronted
in order to get to the final truth. One thing about Kurtz's writing is she
always makes room for some unusual food references and visits Big Mike's Jazz
Bar and The Cored Apple to keep her strength up during her adventures. Kurtz is
always a fun read and this is no exception. Cybil Lewis is one of those
characters that is quick to remember and enjoy. If you are not familiar with her
adventures, there are three others out there for you. This volume is highly
recommended.
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