(Thinking about it, the coffee-table book is yet another example of the wide array of boredom-reducing technology that was outcompeted by phones.)
But I did read this one - all the way through, beginning to end, like a "normal" book. So I suppose I might as well say something about it.
E Is for Edward is a celebration of the work of the illustrator, writer, and artist Edward Gorey. The subtitle is "A Centennial Celebration of the Mischievous Mind of Edward Gorey," and it was indeed published last year, the hundred anniversary of Gorey's 1925 birth. The author is Gregory Hischak, curator of The Edward Gorey House - the museum created from Gorey's home and full of his stuff - which means he's probably the best current person to give an overview of Gorey's work.
It is not a biography - there have been several of those. It doesn't reprint entire works by Gorey - the Amphigorey series already does that. It's also not primarily a process book, though there are some sketches and unpublished work. (That's good, because most Gorey fans will want to see the stuff they recognize.)
Instead, Hischak organizes Gorey's wide body of work into eight loosely-themed chapters, from "Hapless Children" to "He Wrote It All Down Zealously," to cover as many of the hundred-plus books Gorey published in his lifetime and the other projects (credits for PBS Mystery!, costumes and set design for a famous 1970s staging of Dracula and a few other theatrical projects, a mostly-just-mentioned vast flow of commercial illustration work that he did for decades) as possible. It's a well-designed book, with lots of Gorey artwork throughout, and Hischak is a knowledgeable guide through it all.
We do get sketches of bits of Gorey's life, mostly out of order, although the first chapter does the whole childhood thing. There's one exceptionally circumlocutious section almost smack-dab in the middle about the word "queer" and whether or not it applies to Gorey, which I take to mean that Gorey was probably gay but either led a mostly celibate life as an adult or that his affairs were so scandalous and so well-hidden that they can't be discussed in public even fifty years later.
(I prefer to believe the latter, but the former is more likely.)
Anyway, the book is mostly "here's a cluster of stuff by Gorey with loosely related themes," one cluster after another. Among those loose clusters are things like ballet, murder, nonsense verse, and clothing. It's informative and interesting, and does - as a coffee-table book must - include lots of Gorey's art, presented well.
My only complaint is that the book drops into reverse-type - white on a deep green - far too often. Designers used to know that knock-out type is inherently more difficult to read, and saved it for special occasions, but, like everything else, the standards of the past are no longer enforced, and children now disobey their parents.
Other than that, it's a handsome, comprehensive look at the work of an American original. And it's large and heavy enough to kill a small child if dropped on them from a height, which would probably amuse Gorey.








