"Charles De Lint - Jack, The Giant-Killer" - читать интересную книгу автора (De Lint Charles)and Oscar Wilde, among others, turned their hands to
fairy stories; at the turn of the century lavish fairy tale collections were produced, a showcase for the art of Arthur Rackham, Edmund Dulac, Kay Nielson, the Robinson BrothersтАФpublished as childrenтАЩs books, yet often found gracing adult salons. In the early part of the Twentieth Century Lord Dunsany, G.K. Chesterton, C.S. Lewis, T.H. White, J.R.R. TolkienтАФ to name but a fewтАФcreated classic tales of fantasy; while more recently weтАЩve seen the growing popularity of books published under the category title тАЬAdult FantasyтАЭтАФas well as works published in the literary mainstream that could easily go under that heading: John EarthтАЩs Chimera, John GardnerтАЩs Grendel, Joyce Carol GatesтАЩ Bellefleur, Sylvia Townsend WarnerтАЩs Kingdoms of Elfin, Mark HalprinтАЩs A WinterтАЩs Tale, and the works of South American writers such as Gabriel Garc├нa M├бrquez and Miguel Angel Asturias. It is not surprising that modern readers or writers should occasionally turn to fairy tales. The fantasy story or novel differs from novels of social realism in that it is free to portray the world in bright, primary colors, a dream-world half remembered from the stories of childhood when all the world was bright and strange, a fiction unembarrassed to tackle the large themes of Good Cooper, who won the Newbery Medal for her fantasy novel The Grey King, makes this comment about the desire to write fantasy: тАЬIn the тАШPoeticsтАЩ Aristotle said, тАШA likely impossibility is always preferable to an unconvincing possibility.тАЩ I think those of us who write fantasy are dedicated to making impossible things seem likely, making dreams seem real. We are somewhere between the Impressionist and abstract painters. Our writing is haunted by those parts of our experience which we do not understand, or even consciously remember. And if you, child or adult, are drawn to our work, your response comes from that same shadowy land.тАЭ All Adult Fantasy stories draw in a greater or lesser degree from traditional tales and legends. Some writers consciously acknowledge that material, such as J.R.R. TolkienтАЩs use of themes and imagery from the Icelandic Eddas and the German Niebelungenlied in The Lord of the Rings or Evangeline WaltonтАЩs reworking of the stories from the Welsh Mabinogion in The Island of the Mighty. Some authors use the language and symbols of old tales to create new ones, such as the stories collected in Jane YolenтАЩs Tales of Wonder, or Patricia McKillipтАЩs The Forgotten Beasts of Eld. And others, like Robin McKinley in Beauty or Angela Carter in The Bloody |
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