xvi, 237 pp. Translated into English by Mike Mitchell with an introduction by Iain Sinclair, woodcut frontispiece and plates by Vladimir Zimakov. "A superbly atmospheric story set in the old Prague ghetto featuring the Golem, a kind of rabbinical Frankenstein's monster, which manifests every 33 years in a room without a door. Stranger still, it seems to have the same face as the narrator. Made into a film in 1920, this extraordinary book combines the uncanny psychology of doppelganger stories with expressionism and more than a little melodrama... Meyrink's old Prague ― like Dickens's London ― is one of the great creation of city writing, an eerie, claustrophobic and fantastical underworld where anything can happen." - Phil Baker in The Sunday Times