In Camera Obscura, World Fantasy Award winner Lavie Tidhar combines the Victorian penny dreadful with exploitation cinema to create a wide-screen thriller of redemption: complete with mad scientists, secret societies, Shaolin monks and figures liberally borrowed from the literature of the era – as only he can.
"A rollicking adventure...a maelstrom of pop culture and recursive fantasy." – Tor.com
"Superb." – Fantasy Book Critic
Lavie Tidhar's work encompasses literary fiction ( Maror, Adama and Six Lives), cross-genre classics such as Jerwood Prize winner A Man Lies Dreaming (2014) and World Fantasy Award winner Osama (2011) and genre works like the Campbell and Neukom winning Central Station (2016). He has also written comics ( Adler, 2020), children's books such as Candy (2018) and The Children's Book of the Future (2024), and created the animated movies Loontown (2023) and The Radio (2024). He is a former columnist for the Washington Post and a current honorary Visiting Professor and Writer in Residence at the American International University in London. His work has been translated into multiple languages. He lives in London.