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Lady Fancifull

~ adventures in a mainly literary obsession

Lady Fancifull

Tag Archives: Fantasy Fiction

Ilka Tampke – Skin

28 Friday Aug 2015

Posted by Lady Fancifull in Children's and Young Adult Fiction, Historical Fiction, Whimsy and Fantastical

≈ 16 Comments

Tags

Book Review, Druids, Dystopia, Fantasy Fiction, Ilka Tampke, Iron-Age Britain, Skin, Young Adult Fiction

Excellently written YA/Fantasy Fiction/Historical Fiction/Dystopian Apocalypse with Lit Fic knobs on thrown in for good measure

SkinWell. Ilka Tampke is an Australian writer, and Skin is her first novel. And what a strange, but excellent novel it is.

Skin is set in Britain, and specifically in Summer (Somerset) between AD 28 and AD 43 in a matriarchy. Iron-Age Britain, a Druid culture, and the might of Rome preparing for invasion.

The central character, Ailia, born in AD 28, is some kind of outsider, and part of the book’s journey is to find her complex destiny, which will bring her to become a leader of her people. Ailia’s age, and her intelligent nature, her individuality and leadership qualities of course suggest the book has a YA market, with Ailia as a role model to identify with. There are also strong young men who are leaders or seers – so heroes of action and heroes of reflection and emotional integrity.

But this is not only a book for a YA audience – it is likely to have appeal for those who are followers of all the heroic myth and fantasy serials which are increasingly popular, probably for a 20s audience.

Celtic knot

Celtic knot

I’m neither of those markets, but was interested in this because although the cynic in me could suggest this might be a book written to capitalise on some populist markets, and is at least a small series (I understand there is a sequel), and the strong storyline and characters inevitably suggest filmic possibilities – the actual writing, not to mention the unusual setting, was the lure.

The exact rituals and beliefs of ancient Druidic culture have been rather lost in the intervening 2000 years, particularly as Rome did not tolerate Druidism, and, Christianity, some 300 years later, after Constantite the Great’s conversion, did much to complete its veiling. I’m not certain, one way or another how much Tampke’s very detailed, fascinating weaving of ‘Druid’ culture and ideology is real, partially real, wholly imagined – but what I will say is there is an absolute coherence in her blend, which is satisfying both in terms of its mysticism and ritual, and it’s very graphic depiction of the world. She has clearly woven into the story a central idea from Australian totemic spirituality (and, I think, Native American Indian culture) that of animal totems, a kind of connection to the rest of the living world which anchors humanity as a part of the animal kingdom and a part of the landscape. I found all those aspects of her possible invention absolutely fascinating and the book is ‘true to itself’ And has that wonderful quality of tapping in to deeper, wider myths. The book as a whole is absolutely ‘the hero journey’ It can be read on many levels simultaneously and doesn’t topple over itself for being made to bear too much.

Iron Age Celtic Des Res Round House

Iron Age Celtic Des Res Round House

If you love adventure stories, particularly fabulous ones which make integrated sense, rather than just being a gung ho collection of mythic or actual battles, I recommend this. I swept through it, turning pages fast, caught up in the story, but also found myself very satisfied with the integrity of her characters, the complex relationships, the believable structures and culture of her ancient society. And there are some wonderful – didn’t see this one coming – twists and turns.

Ailia, her central character is without ‘Skin’ in metaphorical rather than literal, anatomical terms. Skin is the totem tribal connection – her journey to find ‘Skin’ and its meaning is satisfyingly archetypal.

The passage from womb to world was only half a birth – the body’s birth. Our souls were born when we were plunged, as babes, into river water, screaming at the cold shock of it, given our name and called to skin.

Deer. Salmon. Stone. Beetle. The North wind. Skin was our greeting, our mother, our ancestors, our land. Nothing existed outside its reach.

Beyond skin there was only darkness. Only chaos.

Because I was without skin I could not be plunged or named. I was half-born, born in body but not in soul. Born to the world but not to the tribe. I could never marry lest skin taboos were unknowingly betrayed…….I was not permitted to learn. All learning began and ended with the songs of skin

Finally, I received this as a review copy from Amazon Vine UK.Ilka-Tampke-300x200

Even more finally, the hardback book itself is stunningly beautiful, with gold coloured mandala like shapes, suggesting complex artistic metalwork all nudging at symbols of interconnectedness, which underlines much of what the book is about.

Skin Amazon UK
Skin Amazon USA

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Neil Gaiman – The Sleeper and The Spindle. Illustrated by Chris Riddell

03 Monday Aug 2015

Posted by Lady Fancifull in Children's and Young Adult Fiction

≈ 12 Comments

Tags

Book Review, Children's Book Review, Chris Riddell, Fantasy Fiction, Neil Gaiman, The Sleeper and The Spindle

Fairy-tale mash-up bon-bon

The Sleeper and The SpindleI hesitated a lot about reviewing this here, as it only just makes my 4 star minimum, rounded up from 3 1/2 for the real book only (and a generous 1 star for the Kindle or ebook version). Do NOT get this as an download for a dedicated ereader

Chris Riddell’s illustrations are at least 50% of the delight of this, you will rue the day if you do eread. (I did, and I do) Secondly, this is not really for children – at least not very young ones, its a little too sophisticated and unsettling. I think a child should probably have a 2 digit birthday before embarking. And it may be particularly welcomed by girls due to the strong central character, who is a queen, not a princess and boldly goes where princes fear to tread!

Neil Gaiman’s The Sleeper and The Spindle, is a kind of mash-up hybrid of Snow White and The Seven Dwarves (except that austerity has obviously hit fairy-land too, as we are down to only 3) and The Sleeping Beauty – though there are sly little nods to several other fairy tales which creep in as well – it’s a bit like `spot the fairy celebrity!’ and I won’t reveal them because it would spoil a reader’s enjoyment and `aha’! moments

Queen and Dress

Part of the delight of an earlier Gaiman novel, The Graveyard Book (which I have in paper version) was Riddell’s illustrations, so I was expecting good things with this one. Sometimes illustrations fare reasonably well in the ereader format, but this is not the case here, as Riddell’s style is so full of fine details, which can’t really be seen properly, as if you try to zoom in, to get detail, you then lose the whole. This story (it is a mere 72 pages long, with several pages of illustrations) though full of some lovely little twists and spooky strangenesses, not to mention redundancies of princes, who needs them! – is a moderately long short story, a mere mouthful of a read. It seems overpriced on eReader, purely because those lovely illustrations, black, white, gold, which you can see on the Look Inside, don’t translate into the dedicated eRead format.

Chris Riddell

Chris Riddell

Those who are happy to read on other devices, to get colour, and are not bothered by reading on traditional screens, could try a download sample and see if it works for you

The story on its own is probably a little slight; unillustrated, I’d probably have felt a little cheated and wished that Gaiman had published several different shortish fairy tale mash-ups in one volume.

It’s not in the same league, illustration or story-wise with Gaiman’s The Truth Is A Cave In The Black Mountains which was beautifully illustrated by Eddie Campbell, and won a ringing 5 star from me (in real book version) but that was because the illustrations were in full and luscious colour, and far more comprehensively integrated with the text.

Neil Gaiman

Neil Gaiman

This story has a more technical mix of horror and humour, but is inventive, as Gaiman reliably is

I believe it may ONLY be available on eRead in the States at the moment, with wood book becoming available in September. Wait, Wait, WAIT!

The Sleeper and The Spindle Amazon UK
The Sleeper and The Spindle Amazon USA

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Graham Joyce – Some Kind Of Fairy Tale

31 Friday Jan 2014

Posted by Lady Fancifull in Fiction, Reading, Whimsy and Fantastical

≈ 5 Comments

Tags

Book Review, Fantasy Fiction, Graham Joyce, Myths and Legends, Some Kind Of Fairy Tale

Nothing like Tinkerbell

Some-Kind-of-Fairy-TaleGraham Joyce’s Some Kind of Fairy Tale is a gentler, sadder story (for adults) than The Tooth Fairy. Joyce writes about the world of myth and magic through very adult eyes indeed, and his fairy world (we are repeatedly told that the denizens of that world get very angry indeed at being referred to as fairies) are sometimes akin to angelic hordes, and sometimes seem to have more than a touch of the demonic about them.

The plot of this is simple. Tara, a young girl, not quite 16, living near Charnwood Forest in Leicestershire, disappears. Fears of course are of abduction, kidnapping and murder. No body is ever found, but her family is broken and devastated. The lives of her parents are blighted, her brother Peter loses not only his beloved sister, but also his best friend Richie, Tara’s boyfriend, suspected by all and sundry (including the police) of having done away with Tara following an argument.

Little Chittenden Wood; bluebell time (fairies' flower)

Little Chittenden Wood; bluebell time (fairies’ flower)

The book opens 20 years later, with a knock on the door – Tara has returned, looking no older than 18 at the most, and she has a tale to tell which no one believes.

Woven into Tara’s stories are erudite chapter beginnings involving quotations by some of the great and good who have made serious studies of the importance of myth and fairy stories from a wide ranging geography of cultures – Marina Warner, Bruno Bettelheim, Joseph Campbell, as well as literary writers such as Angela Carter, G.K Chesterton, and who used these stories to uncover the deep subconscious levels they allude to .

Katherine Cameron artwork - Thomas The Rhymer, Wiki Commons

Katherine Cameron artwork – Thomas The Rhymer, Wiki Commons

One such quoted chapter heading source is the following rather lovely comment from W.H. Auden

‘A fairy tale……………on the other hand, demands of the reader total surrender; so long as he is in its world, there must for him be no other’

The other woven story is that of a real trial which took place in Ireland, not that long ago, in 1895, where a young woman Bridget Cleary was tortured and burned by her husband, father, other relatives and neighbours, because they believed she had been stolen away by fairies and the woman now appearing to be Bridget was in fact a fairy changeling. Excerpts from the court transcripts are quoted. This is very far from twee.

Joyce, a serious writer with however a mordant and gleeful touch mixes together a story about ageing, memory, lost dreams, yearnings for a world of less ordinary meaning, the real wonder of the world we live in if we only wake from our dream, with these erudite writings and literary traditions from the fairy world.

As for that mordant gleefulness. Much humour is laced in around psychobabble – Tara submits to psychotherapy with a maverick hip practitioner, who nevertheless naval gazes wonderfully poking in the cauldron of the DSM (Diagnostic and Statistical Manual – a self-publicised Bible of mental health diagnosis, where anything remotely human can be rendered as pathology.

Further fun is had with Tara’s 13 year old nephew, very much in the middle of sulking hormonal adolescence, with more than a touch of the Adrian Moles about him. I never thought I would find a dead cat funny……………………….

Ginger cat Feb 5, 2009

I enjoyed this enormously and will certainly be making my way through more of Graham-Joyce-212x300Joyce’s canon of work.

My only slight reservation was of the importance of Richie in Tara’s story – it looked as if the relationship was on the out, through Tara’s wishes, when she disappeared, so the ain true love aspect (on her side) didn’t quite feel as potent as suggested

Some Kind Of Fairy Tale Amazon UK
Some Kind Of Fairy Tale Amazon USA

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Neil Gaiman – American Gods

05 Thursday Sep 2013

Posted by Lady Fancifull in Fiction, Reading, Whimsy and Fantastical

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

American Gods, Book Review, Fantasy Fiction, Myths and Legends, Neil Gaiman

Rambling, chaotic, wild, confused – and wondrous

american-gods-book-cover-imageThis republished version of Neil Gaiman’s novel from 2001 is like a director’s cut of a movie. Originally differently edited, Gaiman here releases the book he originally wrote, more or less.

It is one of those shambling, rambling, picaresque Don Quixote type tall tales – except the landscape is remarkably dark, gothic, terrifying and bloody, as well as quirky, inventive and playful.

A mysterious man, Shadow, whose rather mythic identity will eventually be revealed is released from his prison sentence early. And from then on, things go abysmally wrong. The symbolically named Shadow, who indeed, always seems to be in someone’s, stumbles into a complex ancient battleground of mankind’s yearning dreams, of the stories we told ourselves of gods and heroes, past and present, of what we worshipped and adored.

Religions are by definition, metaphors, after all: God is a dream, a hope, a woman, an ironist, a father, a city, a house of many rooms, a watchmaker who left his prize chronometer in the desert, someone who loves you – even, perhaps, against all evidence, a celestial being whose only interest is to make sure your football team, army, business or marriage thrives, prospers and triumphs over all opposition

Religions are places to stand and look and act, vantage points from which to view the world

Gaiman peoples America with the various gods brought from various parts of the globe, by those who landed on her shores, from history and from prehistory. Bellicose Norse Gods rub shoulders with matriarchal pagans from Africa, Egyptian animal headed gods accompany leprechauns and pixies. Savage humour and horrific zombies party together. Orpheus makes a different kind of journey into a different kind of Hades, and Eurydice is far from a pretty sight.

Four sons of Horus, Wiki Commons

Four sons of Horus, Wiki Commons

Ancient gods like these have been forgotten, but linger on, and modern America worships new myths, creates new creatures of power – mass media, technology – paler but no less violent gods, and as demanding of human sacrifice.

My people figured that maybe there’s something at the back of it all, a creator, a great spirit, and so we say thank you to it, because its always good to say thank you. But we never built churches. We didn’t need to. The land was the church. The land was the religion. The land was older and wiser than the people who walked on it.

I’m not absolutely certain (not having read the original) whether the ‘writer’s cut’ improves the no doubt rather less rambling version of 10 years ago. There were times, sure, when i felt – oh just get ON with the narrative and stop going round and round, and then another revelation would strike.

Flabby it may be at times, not, I think, anywhere near as sure and crafted as Gaiman’s latest,The Ocean at the End of the Lane but still, here is a writer who is populist, hugely inventive and with such brilliant imagination and generosity in the telling of tales, that occasional overindulgence must be accepted

Oh, and this one is most definitely NOT a children’s book – some of the sex and violence neil-gaimanis very dark indeed

American Gods Amazon UK
American Gods Amazon USA

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Helene Wecker – The Golem and The Djinni

31 Saturday Aug 2013

Posted by Lady Fancifull in Fiction, Whimsy and Fantastical

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

Book Review, Fantasy Fiction, Helene Wecker, The Golem and The Djinni

Fantastical, imaginative narrative exploring the nature of freedom of choice in nineteenth century New York

I must admit to gobbling up Helene Wecker’s delicious, sprawling-yet-tightly plotted The Golem and the Djinniaccount of the meeting of two mythological creatures from two different cultural and religious traditions – The Golem from Kabbalah/Central European Judaism , the Djinn from Bedouin/Middle East/Islamic as if it were the fabulously tasting confection it is, and I were a sweet toothed literary addict starved of my life-line supply of a tall deep tale excellently told.

The reading far into the night, the laying aside of tasks which needed to be done, the rushing away from social encounters to indulge my fierce craving to read on and on and on, is finally over, the book finished Blast. Blast! BLAST! It’s her first novel too – there are no earlier ones to discover hidden in the confection box

220px-Prague-golem-reproduction

Wecker tells a tall, yet beautifully grounded in reality tale of the Golem, a creature fashioned by man, not by God, from clay (like Adam) but to serve his or her master like a slave. Golems are allowed no desire but that of their master. Hugely powerful, enslaved though they are, if angered, they are an unstoppable force, a Frankenstein’s monster indeed. This particular Golem is female, and is also constructed with intelligence and curiosity – and an overwhelming sense of empathy, so she is pulled hither and thither by the different, competing wants and desires of people’s thoughts.

Set against this proper creature of earth, learning to restrain the voices in her head, the competing empathic sense towards the denizens of her environment, is the fiery untamed voice of freedom to indulge desire, with no responsibility, with no sense of the wrong done to other, as represented by an ancient Djinni (the genie figure of Aladdin’s Lamp is one such creature). Our Djinni, like the Golem, has also been enslaved. He was his own creature, bound by magic, she was created by magic, and is learning to impose a certain freedom of choice in seeking to tame her own destructive side, in learning how to turn down the clamouring, conflicting needs and wants of the people she comes across. Her compassion is her cross to bear, as much as her potential for destruction. The Djinni’s journey is to learn to accept that merely indulging one’s own whim, may also cause devastation.

Our two protagonists are embedding in a rich immigrant community – Jews from Europe, Maronite and Eastern Orthodox Christians from Syria, interspersed with the Djinn’s 1000 year old history in the desert, and Islamic culture

How Wecker weaves all this together, as intricately, beautifully and satisfyingly as the Golem’s bakery skills or the Djinni’s artistic metal-work creations, is a wonderful thing to read. There is a dark, believable story, there are metaphysical concepts about how free any of us are – bound by our own nature, how much of our choices do we really make, where does the ultimate responsibility lie? And if we do an evil or a thoughtless act, because of our natures, how much of all the events that transpire are our fault, how much do other peoples’ choices also contribute to where responsibility lies?

I can’t praise this highly enough. It is a gorgeous, page turning, remarkably easy read,SONY DSC which is at the same time ‘about stuff’ – as indeed myths often are, with their meaning, like icebergs, lying below the surface and waiting to ambush us

And how I wish I had not yet read it, and had this wondrous journey to begin! O still-to-read-this person – how I envy you!

I received this as a review copy from Amazon Vine UK. Lucky me!

The Golem and The Djinni Amazon UK
The Golem and The Djinni Amazon USA

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John Connolly – The Book of Lost Things

03 Saturday Aug 2013

Posted by Lady Fancifull in Fiction, Reading, Whimsy and Fantastical

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

Adult Faerie Tale, Book Review, Fantasy Fiction, John Connolly, The Book of Lost Things

200px-ThebookoflostthingsAngela Carter For Boys – mythic, subversive, dark

My title does not imply that this isn’t a wonderful read for girls and women, just that where Carter often ‘rewrites’ the fairy story from the perspective of the female characters, and explores the inner lessons of myths and fairy stories for women’s ‘heroic journeyings’, Connolly has a young boy, on the edge of adolescence, whose journey is explored, and he meets a particularly strong cast of male archetypes, as he makes his hero’s journey, and discovers what being a hero is really about, and what it means to accept the challenge and face one’s shadow.

This was a wonderful, and surprising read for me – came from an Amazon recc because I loved Susanna Clarke’s ‘Jonathan Strange and Mr Norrell’

I’ve never read any of Connolly’s other writings, and gather that he seems to write 2 – or maybe even 3, sorts of novels.

This is a reworking, or perhaps an underneath working, an inner working, of various fairy stories. Beautifully written, its like a cross between the aforementioned Angela Carter in ‘Company of Wolves’ mode, and George MacDonald Fraser (the Curdie books) Fairy stories are pretty dark and subversive anyway – or at least the Grimm versions are, not the prettified Perrault workings, which take the deep truth, magic and shadow element away.

Connolly goes back to the heart (or should i say the jugular!!) of the stories, and subverts the subversion further. – its a bit like reading Jung, – you get incredible psychoanalytic depth – but, hey, this is a fairytale, and the writing is quite clear and spare.

There’s (a bit) of welcome light relief, in the form of the Seven Dwarfs, who are Marxist-Leninists, – they aren’t too keen on princes (or on Snow White, who is a bully with an eating disorder!) – best laugh out loud moment was the description of the Prince who ‘ponces in on his horse like a great big perfumed teacosy’ – to a Snow White with more than a touch of PC attitude about being kissed by a strange man!

From here in things get very dark indeed. The background of the story is set in 39, so JohnConnollythere is a very dark subtext to the ‘Huntress’ story, in the light of how ‘science’ and ‘scientific research’ was proceeding in concentration camps.

This is definitely a book for re-reading – it is very easy to read, but touches deep.

The Book Of Lost Things Amazon UK
The Book Of Lost Things Amazon UK

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