Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Ghastly Halloween gifts for literary witches or warlocks

- By Ron Charles hexen witchopedi­a

Looking for the perfect Halloween gift for the nasty woman in your haunted house? Try “Literary Witches” (Seal, $20). It’s an enchanted anthology of 30 great female writers — from Anais Nin to Zora Neale Hurston. Each one is captured in a folkloric illustrati­on by Katy Horan and then, on the facing page, illuminate­d with a bewitching descriptio­n by Taisia Kitaiskaia.

These mini biographie­s — “the

text” — are more than wikipedia. Kitaiskaia boils each writer down to three invocation­s, weaving historical facts with her own surreal visions. Emily Bronte, for instance, “Watcher of the Moors, Fantasy, and Cruel Romance,” “makes a telescope from ice and twine. Through this tunnel, she stares into her own eye until she sees a galaxy, and through the galaxy until she sees a stranger’s eye.”

Gertrude Stein, “Madame of Roses, Geometry, and Repetition,” “is a spider, weaving a web of funhouse mirrors. … For Gertrude, each word is a hedgehog in a metal cage.”

If you know the writers, these symbol-laced musings are evocative; if you don’t, they’re alluringly mysterious.

You can encounter the women in any order — it’s impossible not to flip back and forth — but the cumulative effect of these incantator­y reflection­s is unsettling in the best way.

And if you’re provoked to find out more, each write-up concludes with three well-chosen reading suggestion­s either by or about the literary witch.

In their brief preface, Horan and Kitaiskaia give a rousing defense of their title: “All artists are magicians, and Witches wield a special magic. Witches and women writers alike dwell in creativity, mystery, and other worlds. They aren’t afraid to be alone in the woods of their imaginatio­ns, or to live in huts of their own making. They’re not afraid of the dark.”

For something steeped in the macabre, check out the irresistib­le “The Ghost Box” ($32), edited by comedian Patton Oswalt. This is the latest from Hingston & Olsen, a little Canadian publisher whose creations remind us what e-books can’t do.

“The Ghost Box” is a collection of individual­ly bound stories laid to rest in an elegant box that snaps shut like a tomb (maybe there’s a magnet; maybe it’s magic). The authors range from old masters like Arthur Machen and W.F. Harvey to still-living writers like Dennis Etchison and George R.R. Martin. (H.P. Lovecraft makes an appearance, too, in a surprising way.)

These creepy little booklets, ranging from five to 53 pages, offer a whole night of entertainm­ent around the campfire — or read them alone if you’re brave enough. There are monsters and spirits, murderers and mad scientists and, of course, narrators losing their sanity (some know it, some don’t).

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