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In this, the first book on English fantasy, Colin Manlove shows
that for all its immense diversity, English Fantasy can best be
understood in terms of its strong national character, rather than
as an international genre. Showing its development from Beowulf to
Blake, the author describes English Fantasy's modern growth through
secondary world, metaphysical, emotive, comic, subversive and
children's fantasy. In them all England has led the world, with
authors as different as Chaucer, Lewis Carroll, J.R.R. Tolkien and
Salman Rushdie.
The great Victorian Christian author George MacDonald is the
well-spring of the modern fantasy genre. In this book Colin Manlove
offers explorations of MacDonald's eight shorter fairy tales and
his longer stories At the Back of the North Wind, The Princess and
the Goblin, The Wise Woman, and The Princess and Curdie. MacDonald
saw the imagination as the source of fairy tales and of divine
truth together. For he believed that God lives in the depths of the
human mind and "sends up from thence wonderful gifts into the light
of the understanding". This makes MacDonald that very rare thing: a
writer of mystical fiction whose work can give us experience of the
divine. Throughout his children's fantasy stories MacDonald is
describing the human and divine imagination. In the shorter tales
he shows how the imagination has different regions and depths, each
able to shift into the other. With the longer stories we see the
imagination in relation to other aspects of the self and to its
position in the world. Here the imagination is portrayed as often
embattled in relation to empiricism, egotism, and greed.
This book is the first thorough analysis of the whole of Lewis'
fiction to show it has behind it a considerable sophistication of
literary technique and patterning. The works discussed include THE
PILGRIMS REGRESS, THE RANSON TRILOGY, THE GREAT DIVORCE, the NARNIA
books and TILL WE HAVE FACES. -.-.- "This is a positively brilliant
book, written with splendor, elegance, profundity and evidencing an
enormous amount of learning. This is probably not a book to give a
first-time reader of Lewis. But for those who are more broadly read
in the Lewis corpus this book is an absolute gold mine of
information. The author gives us a magnificent overview of Lewis'
many writings, tracing for us thoughts and ideas which recur
throughout, and at the same time telling us how each book differs
from the others. I think it is not extravagant to call C. S. Lewis:
His Literary Achievement a tour de force." - Robert Merchant, St.
Austin Review, Book Review Editor
"Aberforth Two more fire whiskeys for these friends Welcome, HARRY
POTTER readers, to the Hog s Head, the gathering place for members
of Dumbledore s Army and the historic rallying point before the
Battle of Hogwarts. We scholars of the Hogwarts Saga (Harry Potter
s triumph over the Dark Lord) have come together here to share our
researches on the meaning of Harry s seven adventures. Listen
attentively to discover hidden secrets of the series and learn why
the books are worthy to be studied more closely Sip that fire
whiskey slowly. Sit back and enjoy the ten best Hog s Head
conversations of the past year, edited into this handy collection.
And don t forget to throw your peanut shells to the goat in the
corner. includes essays by John Granger, Colin Manlove, Amy H.
Sturgis, James W. Thomas and many others].
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