
George H. (George Henry) Smith
George Henry Smith was an American science fiction author who also wrote soft-core erotica. He is not the same person as George H. Smith, a libertarian writer, or George O. Smith, another science fiction writer. There were at least three authors writing as "George H. Smith" in the 1960s; one wrote many "swamp love" paperback originals, which are often erroneously attributed to George Henry Smith. Smith himself used the pseudonyms Jeremy August, Jerry August, Don Bellmore, Ross Camra, M J Deer, John Dexter ; George Devlin, Robert Hadley, Jan Hudson, Jerry Jason, Clancy O'Brien, Alan Robinson, Holt Standish, Diana Summers, Hal Stryker, Hank Stryker, Morgan Trehune, Roy Warren, and J X Williams for publishers such as Avalon, Beacon, Boudoir, Brandon House, Epic, Evening Reader, France, Greenleaf, Midwood, Monarch, Notetime, Pike, Pillow, and Playtime. It is known that he wrote more than 100 novels.

Narakan Rifles, About Face!
On a swampy world besieged by invaders, an unlikely leader must transform a ragtag group of natives to defend their land and the helpless.
By George H. (George Henry) Smith

The Last Days of L.A.
As civilization crumbles and the threat of nuclear war looms large, a man desperately tries to awaken a city lost in denial before it’s too late.
By George H. (George Henry) Smith

The Ordeal of Colonel Johns
A Revolutionary War hero pulled into the future faces a clash of values and a family legacy he struggles to understand, forcing him to choose between two worlds.
By George H. (George Henry) Smith

The Last Crusade
In a future of rubble and relentless war, soldiers with wiped memories must fight enemies they don't understand, and for a cause buried in their forgotten pasts.
By George H. (George Henry) Smith

Witness
In a locked-down research facility, the only witness to a scientist's murder is a computer that refuses to reveal the killer, testing the limits of technology and human morality.
By George H. (George Henry) Smith

Benefactor
A desperate inventor trying to escape a furious mob ends up in a future ruled by robots, where his own creations lead to his demise.
By George H. (George Henry) Smith