Metropolis by Thea von Harbou (Heathen Edition)

Metropolis

Spine #61
Author
Thea von Harbou
Translator
Anonymous
First Edition
1925 / 1927
Heathen Edition
October 10, 2025
Refreshed
Pages
254
Heathen Genera
Hi-Sci-Fi
Paperback ISBN
978-1-948316-61-3
Hardcover ISBN
978-1-963228-61-8

Did he not live in a town which lay deeper under the earth than the underground stations of Metropolis, with their thousand shafts—in a town the houses of which storied just as high above squares and streets as, above in the night, did the houses of Metropolis, which towered so high, one above the other?

Had he ever known anything else than the horrible sobriety of these houses, in which there lived not men, but numbers, recognizable only by the enormous placards by the house-doors?

Had his life ever had any purpose other than to go out from these doors, framed with numbers, out to work, when the sirens of Metropolis howled for him—and ten hours later, crushed and tired to death, to stumble into the house by the door of which his number stood?

Was he, himself, anything but a number—crammed into his linen, his clothes, his cap? Had not the number also become imprinted into his soul, into his brain, into his blood, that he must even stop and think of his own name?

Thea Gabriele von Harbou (1888–1954) was a German screenwriter, author, film director, and actress best remembered as the screenwriter of the 1927 sci-fi classic Metropolis and the 1925 novel on which it was based . . . A dystopian and haunting vision of the future eerily resonant with our present—where humanity teeters between progress and collapse—where a privileged elite live above ground in luxurious gilded towers while oppressed workers slave below ground maintaining their monstrous machines. As tensions rise and revolution brews, Freder, the idealistic and privileged son of the city’s ruler, falls in love with Maria, a poor, compassionate woman from the underground who preaches peace and unity among the laborers. While searching for meaning in the fractured society, Freder defies his father’s authority and seeks to bridge the gap between the classes and unite the disparate social orders. Pulsing with mythic symbolism, philosophical depth, and poetic urgency, each page-turn of Metropolis feels like plunging deeper into a prophecy.

"A remarkable piece of work."
Michael Joseph
The Bookman

You might dig these, too!

The Land That Time Forgot by Edgar Rice Burroughs (Heathen Edition)

The Land That Time Forgot

Hi-Sci-Fi

Heathen Gift Card

Gift Cards
The Iron Republic by Richard Jameson Morgan (Heathen Edition)

The Iron Republic

Hi-Sci-Fi
WE by Yevgeny Zamyatin (Heathen Edition)

WE

Rebellion 101