Fafhrd and the Gray Mouser series •
Two Sought Adventure (1958). Collection of six short stories. Later expanded and retitled as
Swords Against Death. •
Swords and Deviltry (1970). Collection of 3 short stories. •
Swords Against Death (1970). Collection of 10 short stories; an expanded edition of
Two Sought Adventure •
Swords in the Mist (1968). Collection of 6 short stories. •
Swords Against Wizardry (1968). Collection of 4 short stories. •
The Swords of Lankhmar (1968). Expanded from "Scylla's Daughter" in
Fantastic, 1963. •
Swords and Ice Magic (1977). Collection of 8 short stories. (Though see
Rime Isle below.) •
The Knight and Knave of Swords (1988). Collection of 4 short stories. Retitled
Farewell to Lankhmar (2000, UK). •
Ill Met In Lankhmar (Copyright 1970, published in book format 1996, The Science Fiction Collection Book Club.)
Novels and novellas •
Conjure Wife (originally appeared in
Unknown Worlds, April 1943) — This novel relates a college professor's discovery that his wife (and many other women) are regularly using
magic against and for one another and their husbands. •
Gather, Darkness! (serialized in
Astounding, May, June, and July 1943) and later published as a book – a dystopian, satirical depiction of a future
theocracy and the revolution that brings it down. •
Destiny Times Three (1945, first in
Astounding) (reprinted 1957 as
Galaxy Novel number 28) •
The Sinful Ones (1953), an adulterated version of ''You're All Alone
(1950 Fantastic Adventures'' abridged); Leiber rewrote the inserted passages and saw published a revised edition in 1980. •
The Green Millennium (1953) •
The Night of the Long Knives (
Amazing Science Fiction Stories, January 1960) •
The Big Time (expanded 1961 from a version serialized in
Galaxy, March and April 1958, which won a
Hugo) — Change War series. Also available in
Ship of Shadows (1979) – see Collections below. •
The Silver Eggheads (1961; a shorter version was published in
The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction in 1959) •
The Wanderer (1964) •
Tarzan and the Valley of Gold (1966) (novelisation of a
Clair Huffaker screenplay) •
A Specter Is Haunting Texas (1969) • ''You're All Alone
(1972) (the first book edition includes two shorter works as well, a revised version was issued as The Sinful Ones'') •
Our Lady of Darkness (1977) This novel, the title of which is drawn from
Thomas de Quincey's
Suspiria de Profundis, was published the same year as the release of
Dario Argento's
Suspiria, which referenced the same idea in de Quincey. It also makes fictional reference to fellow novelists
Jack London,
Clark Ashton Smith and
H. P. Lovecraft and others. •
Rime Isle (1977) (somewhere between a
novella and a two-
novelette collection, composed of "The Frost Monstreme" and "Rime Isle" offered as a unitary volume) •
Ervool (Cheap Street, 1980—limited ed of 200 numbered copies). A standalone edition of a short story originally published in the 1940s fanzine
The Acolyte. •
The Dealings of Daniel Kesserich (1997) —
H. P. Lovecraftian novella written in 1936 and lost for decades •
Dark Ladies (NY: Tor Books, 1999). Omnibus edition of
Conjure Wife and
Our Lady of Darkness Collections • ''
Night's Black Agents'' (Arkham House, 1947). Reprinted by Berkley, 1978 with the addition of two stories – "The Girl With the Hungry Eyes" and "A Bit of the Dark World". The definitive hardcover edition is the Gregg Press (1980) edition, which adds a foreword by
Richard Powers to the complete contents of the Berkley edition. •
The Mind Spider and Other Stories (1961). Collection of 6 short stories. •
Shadows With Eyes (1962). Collection of 6 short stories. •
A Pail of Air (1964). Collection of 11 short stories. •
Ships to the Stars (1964). Collection of 6 short stories. •
The Night of the Wolf (1966). Collection of 4 short stories. •
The Secret Songs (1968). Collection of 11 short stories. •
Night Monsters (1969). Collection of 4 short stories. UK (1974) edition drops 1 story and adds 4. •
The Best of Fritz Leiber (1974). Collection of 22 short stories. (Introduction by
Poul Anderson, "The Wizard of Nehwon") •
The Book of Fritz Leiber (1974). Collection of 10 stories and 9 articles. •
The Second Book of Fritz Leiber (1975). Collection of 4 stories, 1 play, and 6 articles. •
The Worlds of Fritz Leiber (Ace Books, 1976). Collection of 22 short stories including "
Catch That Zeppelin!". •
Bazaar of the Bizarre (1978) •
Heroes and Horrors (1978). Collection of 9 stories. •
Ship of Shadows (1979). Collection of 5 award-winning short stories [ 3 stories 2 novellas & 1 novel
The BigTime.] •
Changewar (1983). Collection of the Changewar short stories (7 stories). •
The Ghost Light (1984). Collection of 9 stories with illustrations and an autobiographic essay with photographs. •
The Leiber Chronicles (1990) Collection of 44 short stories. •
Gummitch and Friends (1992). Leiber's cat stories, the first five of which feature Gummitch. •
Ill Met in Lankhmar (White Wolf Publishing, 1995, ) combines
Swords and Deviltry (1970) and
Swords Against Death (1970). •
Lean Times in Lankhmar (White Wolf Publishing, 1996, ) combines
Swords in the Mist (1970) and
Swords Against Wizardry (1970) •
Return to Lankhmar (White Wolf Publishing, 1997, ) combines
The Swords of Lankhmar (1968) and
Swords and Ice Magic (1977) •
Farewell to Lankhmar (White Wolf Publishing, 1999, ) •
The Black Gondolier (2000) Collection of 18 short stories. •
Smoke Ghost and Other Apparitions (2002) Collection of 18 short stories. •
Day Dark, Night Bright (Collection of 20 short stories, 2002) •
Horrible Imaginings (2004) Collection of 15 short stories. •
Strange Wonders (Subterranean Press, 2010). Edited by
Benjamin Szumskyj. Collection of 48 unpublished and uncollected works (drafts, fragments, poems, essays, and a play). •
Fritz Leiber: Selected Stories (Night Shade Books, 2010). Edited by
Jonathan Strahan and
Charles N. Brown. Collection of 17 stories, with an introduction by
Neil Gaiman.
Plays •
Quicks Around the Zodiac: A Farce. (Newcastle, VA: Cheap Street, 1983). (Reprinted in
Strange Wonders, 2010).
Essays •
The Mystery of the Japanese Clock. A standalone essay on the workings of a digital Japanese clock. Montgolfier Press, 1982, with Introduction by his son
Justin Leiber. (Reprinted in
Strange Wonders, 2010).
Poetry •
Demons of the Upper Air (Glendale, CA: Roy A. Squires, 1969). •
Sonnets to Jonquil and All (Glendale, CA: Roy A. Squires, 1978).
Screen adaptations Conjure Wife has been made into feature films four times under other titles: •
Weird Woman (1944) starring
Lon Chaney Jr. One of six Inner Sanctum mystery films made by Universal Studios based upon the old
Inner Sanctum radio series. •
Conjure Wife was also adapted for the 1960 TV series
Moment of Fear (episode title "The Accomplice") •
Night of the Eagle (also known as
Burn, Witch, Burn!) (1962) (screenplay by
Charles Beaumont,
Richard Matheson and
George Baxt, directed by
Sidney Hayers, produced by Albert Fennell) • ''
Witches' Brew (also known as Which Witch is Which?'') (1980) Directed by Richard Shore and starring
Teri Garr and
Richard Benjamin.
"The Girl with the Hungry Eyes" was filmed under that title by Kastenbaum Films in 1995. (This film is not to be confused with the 1967 William Rotsler film
The Girl with the Hungry Eyes which is entirely unrelated to Leiber's story). Two Leiber stories were filmed for TV for
Rod Serling's
Night Gallery. These were "The Girl with the Hungry Eyes" (1970) (adapted by Robert M. Young and directed by John Badham) and "The Dead Man" (adapted and directed by Douglas Heyes). ==See also==