Print

Print


Oh goody, we're walking our souls on our soles now--soon we'll be lost
lost in our supercultural forest and desperately looking for the Trail
of Breadcrumbs. But it's no use! The birds have eaten our maps, and all
the kindly woodcutters of yore have become Sierra Club phone solicitors
trying to raise a few bucks to save the Arctic wilderness from the Bush
league. We'll never find our way home again!

Okay, having gotten that out of my system, let me say thanks for the
tip on John Grant's Encyclopedia of Fantasy (anything available from
or on it online?) and suggest in turn the Encyclopedia of Fairies by
renowned "elficologist" Pierre Dubois, the TOC and excerpts from which
at Amazon.com (as of last month anyway) will indicate how comprehensive
this encyclopedia is and give you a sense of Dubois prose style (in
translation at least), which I find, er, enchanting myself. As to its
soundness, I have no way of judging that myself and decided to elide
the whole question by reading such works as lore in and of themselves.
More obviously scholarly material is available, too, if that's what
you need, such as the two or three websites maintained by University
of Pittsburgh anthropologist D.L. Ashliman, whose special interest is
Germanic and Celtic changelings, but whose websites (and the links to
others there) are great resources for things wee and twee. The other
great site for my purposes (a banshee/ballad project) is Lyra Celtica,
where you can find many ancient and modern English, Scottish, Irish,
Bretagne, and Cornish poems, high- and low-cultural alike--some of
them "border" ballads of the otherworldly sort (and avant la melodie)--
which, when you see compiled this way, really give you a sense of how
important such lore was to the nationalizing-mythologizing processes
of these regions. And the accompanying notes by William Sharp seem
both reliable and geared toward a synthesizing of regional traditions
in terms of the way several different ones will spawn a figure like the
headless horseman of our own Catskill Mountains, while respecting the
differences of topo/typographic specificities (many of them landscape-
dependent).

I've also been reading a fascinating study published by Oxford UP
last year (or 1999 maybe) on fairies in Victorian England (the art
and literature thereof) and the circumstances under which this age's
culture supposedly drove them out of the British Isles for good. The
author's name is Carol Silver, but the title is eluding me at the
moment and the book's at home. Among other interesting aspects she
covers are such cases as those fake (1930s?) photos of two little
English girls--sisters--playing in their garden with their fairy
friends (all looking suspiciously like Tinkerbell) that inspired
the song "There Are Fairies At the Bottom of My Garden"--and which
were believed genuine by some otherwise smart and sane people of
the time--and the so-called "Tipperary Horror" of the late 1890s,
when a middle-class man, together with some of his friends and
relatives, and the local "elf doctor" were charged (though I think
only this man was actually tried) with the murder of his wife, whom
they all believed to be a changeling and were trying to "send back"
to the other side in hopes that the man's "real" wife would be
restored to them.

Candice



>I am also a great admirer of John Clute and John Grant's Encyclopedia of
>Fantasy. Much more than a reference book, a source book for literary ideas,
>with its entries on woods and borderlands and the changed time-frames of
>people who've been kidnapped by fairies. The only problem with it is that I
>don't altogether trust their verdict on the authors they've written about -
>and I must admit that sword-and-sorceror stuff strikes me as incredibly
>naff. So I'm always on the lookout for good literature of the fantastic that
>doesn't overstretch my credulity. Any suggestions?
>
>Best wishes,
>
>
>Matthew Francis
>[log in to unmask]
>
>Visit my website at http://www.7greenhill.freeserve.co.uk
>
>-----Original Message-----
>From: [log in to unmask] <[log in to unmask]>
>To: [log in to unmask] <[log in to unmask]>
>Date: 15 January 2001 21:24
>Subject: Re: unfashionable thought
>
>
>>Doug Barbour wrote:
>>
>>>b) I'd sort of agree that Anne Rice's first novel had style, but she's
>been
>>>going downhill ever since, and I found, say, her last couple unreadable,
>>>and especially boring in the extreme. She has fallen into that worst of
>>>states, believing that her thinking is more important than her
>>>storytelling, that she has something to SAY! There are far more writers, I
>>>believe, even in supernatural fiction, who write with far finer style than
>>>she does...
>>
>>    Agreed on Anne Rice, although I found the second novel (_The
>>Vampire Lestrat_) as interesting as _Interview_, if already marred
>>by some latent signs of the fatal overwriting that became so florid
>>in her subsequent books.
>>
>>I agree too that there's better to be had in supernatural fiction:
>>Peter Straub is a very good novelist, not just a competent genre
>>hack, and he's not afraid to get political--as in _The Throat_,
>>where Vietnam is "horrified" and bears the novel's antiwar burden.
>>Just bought _Mr. X_ (has anyone else read it yet?). And among the
>>current Brit novelists of the supernatural, Peter James is very
>>good, I think.
>>
>>Brit novelist Gwendolyn Butler's Coffin series is also good, horror-
>>enhanced detective fiction, the vaguely horrific atmosphere of the
>>City/Docklands area of London worked by her detective, John Coffin--
>>a historical urban setting where many buried bodies still are--
>>lending itself to an eeriness that deepens Butler's genre meditations
>>on evil. Crime is also dramatized in and as its performance in the
>>same space that was once a theater district, the resurrection of which
>>via ongoing restorations to an old playhouse by the detective's wife,
>>a former actress and current producer, "naturally" turns up some of
>>those buried bodies at the various historical layers and levels of
>>which this urban socioarchaeology-cum-detective fiction is composed.
>>
>>Candice
>>
>
>