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OverviewThe Devil's Library is a book of lies, a book about books that don't exist, a book about dark magic hidden in the written word. The imagined texts are sometimes ancient, sometimes apocryphal. There are devils and wraiths, killers and demonologists, prophets and philosophers. The Devil's Library is a collection of fables and myths: imaginary, fabulous, and sometimes murderous. This text is not a road-and once it's been opened, there's no turning back. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Joachim GlagePublisher: Jackleg Press Imprint: Jackleg Press Dimensions: Width: 15.20cm , Height: 1.30cm , Length: 22.90cm Weight: 0.349kg ISBN: 9781956907117ISBN 10: 1956907114 Pages: 234 Publication Date: 16 September 2024 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Available To Order ![]() We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately. Table of ContentsReviews"Glage has given us an utterly captivating collage of essays that is, in the truest and best sense, sui generis. With its unerring instinct for unearthing intellectual gold in the inexhaustible, labyrinthine, and stubbornly persistent realm of printed matter, The Devil's Library stands in the lineage of Thomas Browne, Coleridge, Borges, and Sebald. Ranging from the abstruse to the fantastic, the complex paradoxes and insights here reclaimed from philosophical, theological, anthropological, or biographical miscellany and brought to life so vividly in these pages are not just being rescued from oblivion. Rather, in Glage's tonally varied and subtly propulsive telling, they are in a deeper sense redeemed. Few books better stage the absorbing delights of voracious, disinterested, and eclectic reading everything from treatises to telegrams, from Scriptural exegesis to newspaper clippings. Glage's responsiveness to the unexpected enriches us all.-Thomas Pfau, Alice Mary Baldwin Professor of English & Professor of Systematic Theology, Duke University Browse the stacks of The Devil's Library at your peril! You'll find obscure but fascinating treatises demonstrating that God cannot be perfect, labyrinthine heretical arguments against traditional morals, and reports of the mysterious deaths and murders of authors. A demonic alternative version of Genesis turns sacred history upside down. Who knew that the devil was not only a humorist but the author of frightening underground books? Discover them here.-Gary Shapiro, author, Nietzsche's Earth: Great Events, Great Politics Hoax meets homage in this glorious collection, an imaginary where bespoke apocrypha and wishful thinking invite us into a labyrinth of possibility, association, and a kind of readerly revisionist collaboration. Funny, subversive, and authoritatively anti-authoritarian, Glage finds no tradition unassailable or otherwise invulnerable to his joyful repurposing. What Stanley Crawford did for travel writing in Travel Notes, Glage does for storytelling and bibliophilia. Joachim Glage is not only a writers' writer but writing's writer. Borges is dancing in his grave.-Andrew Tonkovich, editor, Santa Monica Review Joachim Glage's fiendishly entertaining collection combines the pleasures of deciphering an ancient scroll, curling up with a good detective story, and stealing an accursed manuscript from a crypt. Erudite, inventive, and marvelously sly, The Devil's Library will delight readers of philosophical speculative fiction until it dissolves in a plume of evil-smelling smoke.""-Sofia Samatar, author, The White Mosque and A Stranger in Olondria" "Glage has given us an utterly captivating collage of essays that is, in the truest and best sense, sui generis. With its unerring instinct for unearthing intellectual gold in the inexhaustible, labyrinthine, and stubbornly persistent realm of printed matter, The Devil's Library stands in the lineage of Thomas Browne, Coleridge, Borges, and Sebald. Ranging from the abstruse to the fantastic, the complex paradoxes and insights here reclaimed from philosophical, theological, anthropological, or biographical miscellany and brought to life so vividly in these pages are not just being rescued from oblivion. Rather, in Glage's tonally varied and subtly propulsive telling, they are in a deeper sense redeemed. Few books better stage the absorbing delights of voracious, disinterested, and eclectic reading everything from treatises to telegrams, from Scriptural exegesis to newspaper clippings. Glage's responsiveness to the unexpected enriches us all. -Thomas Pfau, Alice Mary Baldwin Professor of English & Professor of Systematic Theology, Duke University Browse the stacks of The Devil's Library at your peril! You'll find obscure but fascinating treatises demonstrating that God cannot be perfect, labyrinthine heretical arguments against traditional morals, and reports of the mysterious deaths and murders of authors. A demonic alternative version of Genesis turns sacred history upside down. Who knew that the devil was not only a humorist but the author of frightening underground books? Discover them here.-Gary Shapiro, author, Nietzsche's Earth: Great Events, Great Politics Hoax meets homage in this glorious collection, an imaginary where bespoke apocrypha and wishful thinking invite us into a labyrinth of possibility, association, and a kind of readerly revisionist collaboration. Funny, subversive, and authoritatively anti-authoritarian, Glage finds no tradition unassailable or otherwise invulnerable to his joyful repurposing. What Stanley Crawford did for travel writing in Travel Notes, Glage does for storytelling and bibliophilia. Joachim Glage is not only a writers' writer but writing's writer. Borges is dancing in his grave.-Andrew Tonkovich, editor, Santa Monica Review Joachim Glage's fiendishly entertaining collection combines the pleasures of deciphering an ancient scroll, curling up with a good detective story, and stealing an accursed manuscript from a crypt. Erudite, inventive, and marvelously sly, The Devil's Library will delight readers of philosophical speculative fiction until it dissolves in a plume of evil-smelling smoke.""-Sofia Samatar, author, The White Mosque and A Stranger in Olondria" Author InformationJoachim Glage has been an academic and an attorney and many other things, but most notably a writer and a filmmaker. His stories, often taking imaginary and fabulous books as their theme, have appeared in literary periodicals and anthologies worldwide. THE DEVIL'S LIBRARY, a collection of his fiction, is his first novel. He resides in Colorado. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |