When Anton Szandor LaVey, founder of the Church of Satan, author of The Satanic Bible and media-savvy prankster and provocateur burst onto the freak-flag-flying San Francisco scene in the mid-1960s, no one could’ve expected that he would one day become the poster fiend for all of the world’s evil. And yet, in truth, LaVey’s ironic, theatrical approach to Satanism differed drastically from the violent, devil-worshipping variety that helped give rise to the “Satanic Panic” of the 1980s. Dressed as a wicked, caped roue, LaVey was a charismatic, ankh-wearing, headline-and-skirt-chasing rake who took what he did seriously-but he was always in on the joke. In BORN WITH A TAIL: The Devilish Life and Satanic Times of Anton Szandor LaVey, journalist Doug Brod combs through the facts & fictions of LaVey’s extraordinary life, providing readers with not just a deeply reported biography of this notorious figure, but also a vivid cultural and social history of the outre movement he spawned. Before founding the Church of Satan in 1966, the Jewish-born, self-described “misfit” Howard Levey immersed himself in the “self”-centered philosophy of Ayn Rand, Friedrich Nietzsche, and Aleister Crowley, which inspired him to devise a non-religious, ultra libertarian “Church” where he could share his findings with likeminded thinkers. But LaVey’s influence could be felt far beyond his flock, as his signature performative Satanism played a prominent role in the occult revival and outbreak of paranormal phenomena that dominated pop culture in the 1970s-a time of exorcisms, reincarnation, alien abductions, psychic surgery, and Ouija boards-and continues to be felt to this day across music, film, TV, and art.