Walter Breen

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(September 5, 1930 – 1993)

Walter Breen was an American fan and author. He was an active member of fandom for much of his life. He wrote for fanzines, and took over editorship of the fanzine Fanac from Terry Carr and Ron Ellik, though he was unable to retain the elan which made their issues so important.

He published Olla Podrida (for OMPA), Allerlei (for FAPA), Tesseract and Sapterranean. He was also in CRAP, SAPS, The Cult, and IPSO. He also published Admirable Crycon and two issues of An Egoboo a Day from All Over as riders to Fanac. The Walter Breen Appreciation Issue was published in his honor by Dave Rike in June 1962. He was a member of the second Futurian Society of New York (the ’50s club), the Fanoclasts, LASFS and the Golden Gate Futurians.

Breendoggle[edit]

The central fact of Breen's fannish life was the Breendoggle (aka Breen Boondoggle or the Breenigan). There had been rumors and suspicions for years that he had molested young boys. In 1963, six years after the second Exclusion Act, the Pacificon IIcommittee acted to ban him from the 1964 Worldcon. Unfortunately, they went about it in a fairly hamfisted way and All Fandom Was Plunged Into War.

Well before the Worldcon was held, Bill Donaho outlined the committee's actions, detailing incidents which had been observed regarding Breen that fell short of seducing youths but nonetheless concerned the committee, in a pre-convention fanzine called The Boondoggle (full title: The Great Breen Boondoggle or All Berkeley Is Plunged into War). This was marked as a letter-substitute and also marked as DNQ. It explained that they had been advised that they might be held liable if Breen were to seduce an underage boy there.

At around the same time, Breen was blackballed by the 13 members of FAPA needed to drop him from FAPA's waiting list, but within a very short period of time a different group of 13 blackballed the entire waitlist. The Secretary Treasurer took notice of the fact that FAPA had no waitlist, and came up with a handy list of names -- which "just happened" to be the original waitlist (before Breen was blackballed) in the original order. This became moot when Breen took on a de facto membership when he married Marion Zimmer Bradley, who was already a member.

Despite protests and even outright boycotts by some, Breen was not allowed to attend the Pacificon II.

Although Breen's behavior at conventions right around the time of Pacificon II seems to have been beyond reproach, Breen (who around the same time published an authoritative book on man-boy relations, Greek Love, under the pseudonym J. Z. Eglinton) was known by many fans, especially in the Bay Area, to have engaged in sex with boys. (Ultimately, he died in prison a multiply-convicted pederast.)

But even decades after the event, the sole point fans on both sides could agree upon is that the resulting feud had long-lasting effects, including leading to a proliferation of mutually exclusive private apas where the opposing forces retired to lick their wounds and assure themselves that they had been undeniably right while the other side had been unmistakably wrong. Donaho later (by Feb 10, 1964, per a letter to Alva Rogers) came to believe that the expulsion was "both ethically wrong and stupid."

Over the years, evidence has become public and we can now be sure that Breen was guilty of substantially what he was accused of. (Perhaps most damning, his wife, Marion Zimmer Bradley, one of his vigorous defenders at the time, later testified under oath that she was aware of his activities.)

Breen was arrested on child molestation charges in 1990. He accepted a plea bargain, which resulted in three years' probation. A year later, he was charged and convicted with eight felony counts of child molestation involving a 13-year-old boy. Though diagnosed with liver cancer in 1992, he was sentenced to 10 years in prison. He died in prison in Chino, California, on April 27, 1993.

Those defending Breen had a number of reasons, but the main one seems to have been that, while Breen's behavior was known to some, it was not known to all fans or even to a majority. Only ten years after Joe McCarthy, fannish tolerance for unsubstantiated accusations was very low, so when the first that many people heard about Breen's acitvities was an official committee publication, the reaction was decidedly mixed.

See Sam Moskowitz' Pacificon II reminiscence for some additional information.

Personal Life[edit]

Breen married SF writer Marion Zimmer Bradley on June 3, 1964. They had two children and separated in 1979. After their separation, Breen moved to Oakland, California. They officially divorced on May 9, 1990.

He was also well-known among coin collectors for writing Walter Breen's Complete Encyclopedia of U.S. and Colonial Coins.

Fanzines and Apazines:



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