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ANTHONY R. CARDNO

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Anthony R. Cardno is an American novelist, playwright, and short story writer.

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ANTHONY R. CARDNO

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Book Review: VICTORY HARBEN TALES FROM THE VOID

September 3, 2024 Anthony Cardno

cover art by Miriana Puglia

TITLE: Victory Harben: Tales from the Void

EDITOR: Christopher Paul Carey

436 pages, Edgar Rice Burroughs, Inc., ISBN 9781945462665 (paperback, hardcover, hardcover collector’s edition)

 

MY RATING:  5 stars out of 5

Victory Harben: Tales from the Void brings together under one cover the novellas featuring Victory Harben and her friends that appeared in the back of the novels that made up Edgar Rice Burroughs Inc.’s “Swords of Eternity Super-Arc” between 2020 and 2022, accompanied by a new novella seeing publication for the first time herein as well as interstitial first-person narration by the titular character that ties everything together.

A short bit of background, for those not familiar: When Edgar Rice Burroughs Inc. decided to launch a new series of canonical adventures of ERB’s famous (and not-so-famous) creations, they also decided to expand the canon with new characters tied to the classic ERB canon. Victory Harben is one of those characters: her mother, Gretchen Von Harben, first appeared in Tarzan and the Tarzan Twins; her uncle and grandfather first appeared in Tarzan and the Lost Empire; her father, Nadoc, is a denizen of Pellucidar; and her godfather, Jason Gridley, appeared in Tazan at the Earth’s Core, Back to the Stone Age, A Fighting Man of Mars, and Pirates of Venus, making him one of the first characters to appear in multiple ERB series. In fact, the “Swords of Eternity Super-Arc” kicks off with Gridley and Victory trying to solve a problem with the Gridley Wave, which allows for communication between Earth, Pellucidar, Mars and elsewhere, and being plunged (separately) into an unpredictable journey through time and space.

So this book was largely a “re-read” for me, of novellas I’d already encountered in other ERB books – but this time presented in the main character’s chronological order. It was fun revisiting these stories and seeing how they fit together. It’s a credit to the authors (Christopher Paul Carey, Mike Wolfer, Geary Gravel, and Ann Tonsor Zeddies) that each novella is eminently readable on its own – other than the question of “where will Victory (or Jason) go next?” there are no cliffhangers. Each novella has a solid beginning, middle, and end with all major plot points resolved.

As I have reviewed most of the novellas when I reviewed the novels with which they originally appeared (HERE, HERE, and HERE), I will concentrate the rest of this review on the new novella included herein, “Victory Harben and the Lord of the Veiled Eye,” written by Christopher Paul Carey (who also created Victory Harben and most of her supporting cast). The novella takes place after Victory has found a way to “force” her interstellar jumps (rather than waiting helplessly for them to happen), so perhaps a bit more than halfway into her timeline and introduces us to another new Burroughsian interplanetary society: one lead by a ruthless leader (the titular Lord of the Veiled Eye), a conqueror of planets and decimator of societies. Victory quickly finds herself, as usual, in a situation in which she does not have all the facts but must act on her instincts to discern good guys from bad guys and how to help. In addition to an intriguing new villain I suspect we have not heard the last of, Carey also introduces another strong woman (in the ERB tradition) with Axia of Ptarxes, a world coming under control of the Lord. The novella alternates thrilling action sequences with thoughtful ruminations on the nature of despots and the way they absorb and/or destroy native cultures.

If you’re not familiar with the extended Edgar Rice Burrough Universe and would like to get a good sense of its depth and breadth, Victory Harben: Tales from the Void is a great starter, as between Victory and Jason and another character, you get to experience more than one part of that universe: Pellucidar (the hollow Earth), Caspak (the land that time forgot), Va-Nah (the world inside the moon), the moons of Barsoom (Mars), and more. And you get to see the distinctive styles of several (but not all) of the authors currently expanding the ERBU.

 

I received an advance reading pdf of this book for free from the publisher in exchange for an honest review. This does not affect my opinion of the book or the content of my review. Victory Harben: Tales from the Void is currently up for pre-order on the Edgar Rice Burroughs Inc. website.

In BOOK REVIEWS Tags edgar rice burroughs universe, edgar rice burroughs, Christopher Paul Carey, Mike Wolfer, geary gravel, ann tonsor zeddies, victory harben
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Photo credit: Bonnie Jacobs

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Anthony’s favorite punctuation mark is the semi-colon because thanks to cancer surgery in 2005, a semi-colon is all he has left. Enjoy Anthony's blog "Semi-Colon," where you will find Anthony's commentary on various literary subjects. 

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Copyright 2017 Anthony R. Cardno. All Rights Reserved.