"Imagine if Monty Python wrote the Mayo Clinic Family Health Book, and you sort of get the idea. Afraid you're afflicted with an unknown malady? Finally you have a place to turn " --Book Sense
You hold in your hands the most complete and official guide to imaginary ailments ever assembled--each disease carefully documented by the most stellar collection of speculative fiction writers ever to play doctor. Detailed within for your reading and diagnostic pleasure are the frightening, ridiculous, and downright absurdly hilarious symptoms, histories, and possible cures to all the ills human flesh
isn't heir to, including Ballistic Organ Disease, Delusions of Universal Grandeur, and Reverse Pinocchio Syndrome.
Lavishly illustrated with cunning examples of everything that
can't go wrong with you, the Lambshead Guide provides a healthy dose of good humor and relief for hypochondriacs, pessimists, and lovers of imaginative fiction everywhere. Even if you don't have Pentzler's Lubriciousness or Tian Shan-Gobi Assimilation, the cure for whatever seriousness may ail you is in this remarkable collection.
Author: Mark Roberts, Kage Baker
Binding Type: Paperback
Publisher: Bantam
Published: 04/26/2005
Pages: 320
Weight: 0.91lbs
Size: 9.06h x 6.08w x 0.61d
ISBN: 9780553383393
Review Citation(s): Ingram Advance 05/01/2005 pg. 110
Booksense '76 June 2005 06/01/2005 pg. 1
About the AuthorEditor Jeff VanderMeer is the author of two short story collections,
City of Saints and Madmen and
A Secret Life, and one novel,
Veniss Underground. He has also edited anthologies
Leviathan 1, 2, and
3, the last a World Fantasy Award winner and Philip K. Dick award finalist.
Mark Roberts runs Chimeric, a graphic design firm, and has been involved in several publishing ventures through the publisher arm of Chimeric. An accomplished illustrator and writer, his work has appeared in
Interzone, The Third Alternative, The New York Review of SF, and many others. Along with his co-editor, Jeff VanderMeer, he has been a finalist for the Hugo Award and the World Fantasy Award for his work on the fake disease guide. He lives in London, England.