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Children鈥檚 Fantasy Literature: An聽Introduction, by Michael Levy and Farah Mendlesohn

Shelley King on a comprehensive tour of magical worlds

Published on
June 16, 2016
Last updated
February 16, 2017
Susan Pevensie in a still from Narnia film
Source: Rex
No Turkish delight here: Susan Pevensie 鈥 from skilled and fearless archer to a girl interested only in lipstick and nylons

In his poem The Vanity of Human Wishes, Samuel Johnson aims to 鈥淟et Observation with extensive view/Survey Mankind from China to Peru鈥, and this book has something of Johnson鈥檚 ambitious scope. Authors Michael Levy and Farah Mendlesohn aim 鈥渢o bring together two traditions of criticism, that of the literature of the fantastic, and that of children鈥檚 literature鈥. As if that were insufficient challenge, 鈥渢his book [also] aims to situate children鈥檚 fantasy in the context of changing ideas of childhood across three centuries; and perhaps more crucially, to consider the effect which the extension of childhood has had upon the writing and publishing of children鈥檚 fiction鈥. From this opening proclamation most readers will be able to anticipate both the evident virtues and necessary shortfalls of the study.

The virtues are indeed many. To those familiar with the landscape of fantasy literature for children and young adults, this volume offers a comprehensive tour of essential reading guided by concise critical insights. The range of texts addressed is genuinely dazzling, each carefully placed in an intricate history of the intersection of the twin subjects of fantasy and children鈥檚 literature. Representative authors make their appearance in due order: Sarah Fielding and The Governess, or Little Female Academy 鈥 check; Mrs Trimmer on the dangers of fairy tales 鈥 check; Susan Cooper and the 鈥淢atter of Britain鈥 鈥 check; Philip Pullman on 鈥渢he Susan problem鈥 鈥 check. I confess that for a while I tried to play 鈥渟pot the omission鈥, but it was soon clear that I wasn鈥檛 going to win that game.

鈥淐ompendium鈥 is a word that has gone out of fashion, but it describes precisely this volume: in a tight, lucid narrative, Levy and Mendlesohn take the reader deftly through three centuries of literature, high and low, always comprehensive in scope, always offering a tantalising glimpse of the essence of each work in question, and always contextualising the factors at play in the development of fantasy literature for children.

Given the impressive breadth of its scholarship, what鈥檚 not to like in this book? For one thing, the uncomfortable feeling that comes from seeing complex literary works 鈥 often works that are dear to the heart and mind of the reader 鈥 precisely reduced to a sentence or two of pithy insight. The richly realised fantasy of London drawn in Charlie Fletcher鈥檚 Stoneheart trilogy, for example, is sketched and accounted for in a single page shared with China Mi猫ville鈥檚 Un Lun Dun, accompanied by a brief discussion of both as 鈥渘ovels in which the city actually matters, where the myth structure emerges from the archaeological layers of London鈥檚 subtly anthropomorphized body鈥. This suggestive remark is neither demonstrated nor elaborated 鈥 the narrative moves on to the next set of texts and critical observations.

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With so much textual territory to cover, of course, there can be no lingering, no pausing to explore idiosyncrasies, no dwelling on the marvels of exquisitely constructed fantasy worlds.

If the contours of the discussion at times feel somewhat flattened, it is perhaps because in wrestling the sheer volume of material into meticulously rational submission, the authors have chosen discipline over passion in their engagement with these works. In the process they also lose a little of the magic along the way.

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Shelley King is professor and head of the department of English language and literature, Queen鈥檚 University, Canada.


Children鈥檚 Fantasy Literature: An Introduction
By Michael Levy and Farah Mendlesohn
Cambridge University Press, 282pp, 拢16.99
ISBN 9781107610293 Published 5 May 2016

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