

The other is a personal journal which Franz suspects was written by the 1930s pulp writer Clark Ashton Smith and recounts bizarre conversations between Smith and de Castries.


One is Megapolisomancy: A New Science of Cities by Thibaut de Castries, a turn-of-the-century pseudoscientific treatise about the proliferation of giant cities across the world and the frightening “paramental” potential building up in all of them.

In his journeys among San Francisco’s used bookstores, he discovers two tomes of particular interest. It could be categorized under a variety of genres, including mystery, thriller, horror, dark fantasy and urban fantasy, but here is another category, one that is very close to my heart: it is a book about books.įranz Westen is a late-1970s version of the pulp writer, churning out novelizations of the television show Weird Underground, which Leiber describes as a “mélange of witchcraft, Watergate, and puppy love.” Franz is a fan and writer of horror fiction and an avid collector of unusual books, frequently referring to (and addressing) his “scholar’s mistress” – the pile of books that perpetually occupies half of his bed. I am speaking instead of something in between, an idea that is quickly becoming irrelevant in the digital age: the book as an artifact filled with information, insight and inspiration that you can hold in your hands, give to someone else… or destroy.įritz Leiber wrote a book called Our Lady of Darkness in 1978 (it would go on to win the World Fantasy Award for Best Novel that year), and in 2010 Tor has reprinted it in trade paperback (it’s also available as an ebook). At the same time I do not mean to fetishize the book, waxing rhapsodic about leather bindings and deckle-edged paper on the contrary, my library is a diverse collection of everything from pristine first edition hardcovers to beat-up secondhand mass market paperbacks. But saying that one loves books is different from saying that one loves literature, a distinction becoming even more meaningful in these days of online publishing and ebooks. I guess that shouldn’t come as much of a surprise, considering that I write book reviews for this website.
