Conjure Wife (1943)

by Fritz Leiber

Synopsis

From the front cover of the Lion first paperback: "Potions in the house... evil in the air... and a witch in his bed."

From the back cover of the Lion first paperback: ""Conjure Wife... is easily the most frightening (and necessarily) the most thoroughly convincing of all modern horror stories. Its premise is that witchcraft still flourishes, or at any rate survives, an open secret among women, a closed book to men. Under the rational overlay of 20th-century civilization this sickly growth, uncultivated, unsuspected, still manages to propagate itself.

Leiber develops this theme with the utmost dexterity, piling up alternate layers of the mundane and outre, until at the story's real climax, the shocker at the end of chapter 14, I am not ashamed to say that I jumped an inch out of my seat. From that point onward the story anticlimax so skillfully managed that I am not really certain I touched the slipcover again until after the last page. Leiber has never written anything better... which perhaps is all that needed to be said." Damon Knight, Science Fiction Adventures"

Books Containing this Title

In addition to its stand-alone volume, this title was published in the follow books. It can be rated independently of any volumes containing it.

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