Fritz Leiber Popular Books

Fritz Leiber Biography & Facts

Fritz Reuter Leiber Jr. ( LEYE-bər; December 24, 1910 – September 5, 1992) was an American writer of fantasy, horror, and science fiction. With writers such as Robert E. Howard and Michael Moorcock, Leiber is one of the fathers of sword and sorcery. Life Fritz Leiber was born December 24, 1910, in Chicago, Illinois, to the actors Fritz Leiber and Virginia Bronson Leiber. For a time, he seemed inclined to follow in his parents' footsteps; the theater and actors feature in his fiction. He spent 1928 touring with his parents' Shakespeare company (Fritz Leiber & Co.) before entering the University of Chicago, where he was elected to Phi Beta Kappa and received an undergraduate Ph.B. degree in psychology and physiology or biology with honors in 1932. From 1932 to 1933, he worked as a lay reader and studied as a candidate for the ministry, without taking a degree, at the General Theological Seminary in Chelsea, Manhattan, an affiliate of the Episcopal Church. After pursuing graduate studies in philosophy at the University of Chicago from 1933 to 1934 and again not taking a degree, he remained in Chicago while touring under the stage name of "Francis Lathrop" intermittently with his parents' company and pursuing a literary career. Six short stories later included in the 2010 collection Strange Wonders: A Collection of Rare Fritz Leiber Works carry 1934 and 1935 dates. He also appeared alongside his father in uncredited parts in George Cukor's Camille (1936), James Whale's The Great Garrick (1937), and William Dieterle's The Hunchback of Notre Dame (1939). In 1936, he initiated a brief, intense correspondence with H. P. Lovecraft, who "encouraged and influenced [Leiber's] literary development" before Lovecraft died in March 1937. Leiber introduced Fafhrd and the Gray Mouser in "Two Sought Adventure", his first professionally published short story in the August 1939 edition of Unknown, edited by John W. Campbell. Leiber married Jonquil Stephens on January 16, 1936. Their only child, philosopher and science fiction writer Justin Leiber, was born in 1938. From 1937 to 1941, Fritz Leiber was employed by Consolidated Book Publishing as a staff writer for the Standard American Encyclopedia. In 1941, the family moved to California, where Leiber served as a speech and drama instructor at Occidental College during the 1941–1942 academic year. Unable to conceal his disdain for academic politics as the United States entered World War II, he decided that the struggle against fascism mattered more than his long-held pacifist convictions. He accepted a position with Douglas Aircraft in quality inspection, primarily working on the C-47 Skytrain. Throughout the war, he continued to regularly publish fiction. Thereafter, the family returned to Chicago, where Leiber served as associate editor of Science Digest from 1945 to 1956. During this decade (forestalled by a fallow interregnum from 1954 to 1956), his output (including the 1947 Arkham House anthology Night's Black Agents) was characterized by Poul Anderson as "a lot of the best science fiction and fantasy in the business". In 1958, the Leibers returned to Los Angeles. By then, he could afford to relinquish his journalistic career and support his family as a full-time fiction writer. Jonquil's death in 1969 precipitated Leiber's permanent relocation to San Francisco and exacerbated his longstanding alcoholism after twelve years of fellowship in Alcoholics Anonymous. He gradually regained sobriety, an effort impeded by comorbid barbiturate abuse, over the next two decades. Perhaps as a result of his substance abuse, Leiber seems to have suffered periods of penury in the 1970s; Harlan Ellison wrote of his anger at finding that the much-awarded Leiber had to write his novels on a manual typewriter propped up over the sink in his apartment. Marc Laidlaw wrote that, when visiting Leiber as a fan in 1976, he "was shocked to find him occupying one small room of a seedy San Francisco residence hotel, its squalor relieved mainly by walls of books". Other reports suggest that Leiber preferred to live simply in the city, spending his money on dining, movies, and travel. In the last years of his life, royalty checks from TSR, Inc. (the makers of Dungeons & Dragons, who had licensed the mythos of the Fafhrd and Gray Mouser series) were enough in themselves to ensure that he lived comfortably. In 1977, he returned to his original form with a fantasy novel set in modern-day San Francisco, Our Lady of Darkness, which is about a writer of weird tales who must deal with the death of his wife and his recovery from alcoholism. In 1992, the last year of his life, Leiber married his second wife, Margo Skinner, a journalist and poet with whom he had been friends for years. Leiber died a few weeks after a physical collapse while traveling from a science fiction convention in London, Ontario, with Skinner. His cause of death was a stroke. He wrote a 100-page-plus memoir, Not Much Disorder and Not So Early Sex, which can be found in The Ghost Light (1984). Leiber's own literary criticism, including several essays on Lovecraft, was collected in the volume Fafhrd and Me (1990). Theater As the child of two Shakespearean actors, Leiber was fascinated with the stage, describing itinerant Shakespearean companies in stories like "No Great Magic" and "Four Ghosts in Hamlet", and creating an actor/producer protagonist for his novel A Specter is Haunting Texas. Although his Change War novel, The Big Time, is about a war between two factions, the "Snakes" and the "Spiders", changing and rechanging history throughout the universe, all the action takes place in a small bubble of isolated space-time the size of a theatrical stage, and with only a handful of characters. Judith Merril (in the July 1969 issue of The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction) remarks on Leiber's acting skills when the writer won a science fiction convention costume ball. Leiber's costume consisted of a cardboard military collar over turned-up jacket lapels, cardboard insignia, an armband, and a spider pencilled large in black on his forehead, thus turning him into an officer of the Spiders, one of the combatants in his Change War stories. "The only other component," Merril writes, "was the Leiber instinct for theatre." Films The similarity of the names of the father and the son caused some filmographies to incorrectly attribute to Fritz Jr. roles which were in fact played by his father, Fritz Leiber Sr., who was the evil Inquisitor in the Errol Flynn adventure film The Sea Hawk (1940) and had played in many other movies from 1917 to the late 1950s. It is the elder Leiber, not the younger, who appears in the Vincent Price vehicle The Web (1947) and in Charlie Chaplin's Monsieur Verdoux (1947). The younger Leiber can be seen briefly as Valentin in the 1936 film version of Camille starring Greta Garbo. In the cult horror film Equinox (1970) directed by Dennis Muren and Jack Woods, .... Discover the Fritz Leiber popular books. Find the top 100 most popular Fritz Leiber books.

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  • Scream Wolf synopsis, comments

    Scream Wolf

    Fritz Leiber

    “Now and then Mrs. Groener used to scream,” the big man explained, “when she’d been drinking heavily I’d leave the bedroom. It may have been a rebuke or summons to me, or a fightin...

  • Schizo Jimmie synopsis, comments

    Schizo Jimmie

    Fritz Leiber

    Jamie Bingham Walsh should have been known as Schizo Jimmie. People with whom he came in really close contact had their minds split and started to live in dream worlds.

  • Fritz Leiber synopsis, comments

    Fritz Leiber

    Fritz Leiber

    Fritz Leiber's work bridges the gap between the pulp era of H. P. Lovecraft and the paperback era of P. K. Dick, and arguably is as influential as both these authors. From a histor...

  • Essential Novelists - Talbot Mundy synopsis, comments

    Essential Novelists - Talbot Mundy

    Talbot Mundy & August Nemo

    Welcome to the Essential Novelists book series, were we present to you the best works of remarkable authors. For this book, the literary critic August Nemo has chosen the two most ...

  • The Ship Sails At Midnight synopsis, comments

    The Ship Sails At Midnight

    Fritz Leiber

    This is the story of a beautiful woman. And of a monster. It is also the story off our silly, selfish, culturebound inhabitants of the planet Earth. Es, who was something of an art...

  • The Big Time synopsis, comments

    The Big Time

    Fritz Leiber

    The Big Time Fritz Leiber A war rages beyond space and time in this Hugo Awardwinning extraordinary tour de force from the acclaimed Master of Science Fiction and Fantasy (A Reade...

  • Later Than You Think synopsis, comments

    Later Than You Think

    Fritz Leiber

    It’s much later. The question is . . . how late?

  • The Anvil of the World synopsis, comments

    The Anvil of the World

    Kage Baker

    Kage Baker's stories and novels of the mysterious organization that controls time travel, The Company, have made her famous in SF. So has her talent for clever dialogue and pointed...

  • The Green Millennium synopsis, comments

    The Green Millennium

    Fritz Leiber

    It all started with the green kitten. Phil Gish had no way to know that his adopted pet was about to catapult him into the center of international intrigue. This quirky book will t...

  • Lean Times in Lankhmar synopsis, comments

    Lean Times in Lankhmar

    Fritz Leiber

    Once upon a time in Lankhmar, City of the Black Toga, in the world of Nehwon, two years after the Year of the Feathered Death, Fafhrd and the Gray Mouser parted their ways.

  • The Greatest SF Stories of Fritz Leiber synopsis, comments

    The Greatest SF Stories of Fritz Leiber

    Fritz Reuter Leiber

    This carefully crafted collection presents the greatest dystopian tales of Fritz Leiber. This book has been designed and formatted to the highest digital standards and adjusted for...

  • The Fritz Leiber SF Collection synopsis, comments

    The Fritz Leiber SF Collection

    Fritz Reuter Leiber

    This carefully created Fritz Leiber collection has been designed and formatted to the highest digital standards and adjusted for readability on all devices. Contents: The Big Time ...

  • The Fritz Leiber Collection synopsis, comments

    The Fritz Leiber Collection

    Fritz Leiber

    A highly acclaimed American writer of fantasy, horror, and science fiction, Fritz Leiber was also a poet, actor in theater and films, playwright, and chess expert. Along with other...

  • The Wolf Pack synopsis, comments

    The Wolf Pack

    Fritz Leiber

    “Finally, something you all know aboutthis epidemic of what we’ve called convulsive accidents. Cases of mild poisoning and electric shock, with the victim suffering muscular spasms...

  • Damnation Morning synopsis, comments

    Damnation Morning

    Fritz Leiber

    Time traveling, which is not quite the good clean boyish fun it’s cracked up to be, started for me when this woman with the sigil on her forehead looked in on me from the open door...

  • Complete Science Adventure of Fritz Leiber synopsis, comments

    Complete Science Adventure of Fritz Leiber

    Fritz Leiber

    An American writer of fantasy, horror, and science fiction. He was also a poet, actor in theater and films, playwright and chess expert. Contents What's He Doing in There? (1957) N...

  • The Mind Spider synopsis, comments

    The Mind Spider

    Fritz Leiber

    “I, the Mind Spider as you name methe deathless one, the eternally exiled, the eternally imprisonedor so his overconfident enemies supposecoming in.”

  • The Cloud of Hate synopsis, comments

    The Cloud of Hate

    Fritz Leiber

    The fogfinger touched the taut arm. Gnarlag’s sneering look turned to one of pure hate, and the muscles of his forearm seemed to double in thickness as he rotated it more than a ha...

  • The World of Dystopia synopsis, comments

    The World of Dystopia

    Fritz Reuter Leiber

    Musaicum Books presents to you this unique collection, designed and formatted to the highest digital standards and adjusted for readability on all devices. Contents:The Creature fr...

  • The Unholy Grail synopsis, comments

    The Unholy Grail

    Fritz Leiber

    Three things warned the wizard’s apprentice that something was wrong: first the deeptrodden prints of ironshod hooves along the forest pathhe sensed them through his boots before s...

  • The Casket-Demon synopsis, comments

    The Casket-Demon

    Fritz Leiber

    “You forget, baroness, the runic rhymes of the Prussian Nostradamus,” said Dr. Rumanescue, Vividy’s astrologist and family magician. “Wenn der KassetteTeufel . . . ’or, to translat...

  • Bazaar of the Bizarre synopsis, comments

    Bazaar of the Bizarre

    Fritz Leiber

    In the Plaza of Dark Delights, which lies seven blocks south of the Marsh Gate and extends from the Fountain of Dark Abundance to the Shrine of the Black Virgin, the shoplights gli...