Tuesday, May 1, 2018

Supernatural Beings in Fantasy: The Fey

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The Sleeping Beauty by John Collier
From fairytale, through folklore, to myth, supernatural beings are a cornerstone of Fantasy storytelling and the fey have always been one of favorites. As a very small child, I loved listening to a retelling of Sleeping Beauty that featured on a local radio station — and subsequently read all the fairytales I could find, particularly those with actual fairies or fey in them.
Some of the qualities associated with the fey that appealed to me included magic, otherness, mystery, power, and delight but also danger. These qualities are among those that also characterize the fey in Fantasy storytelling, such as Diana Wynne Jones' children's book Power of Three. Rudyard Kipling's Puck of Pooks Hill and Rewards And Fairies are another, though older example — to a decidedly adult version featuring some of the same characters, in Raymond E Feist's dark-edged Faerie Tale.
The fey unquestionably have their place in adult storytelling. Author CJ Cherryh has a series of Fantasy novels centered on the Fey and folklore, some in analogs of this world, such as Rusalka and Chernevog, while the Ealdwold books are set in an essentially "other" world where the fey are closer in kind to Tokien's elves. The fey appear in Charlaine Harris's Sookie Stackhouse series, in Neil Gaiman's American Gods, and Charles De Lint's Newford novels. In Stina Leicht's The Fey & the Fallen series, a darker and more brutal version of the fey are entwined with the Northern Irish Troubles.
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Readers who are fans of fairytale retellings and YA lit. will know this is home turf for encountering the fey. Some examples I have enjoyed include Charles De Lint's The Blue Girl, Melissa Marr's Wicked Lovely, and Elizabeth Ann Scarborough's Godmother books, which take a series of diverse fairytales and weave them into a contemporary story.

The fey take many forms, however, and Maggie Stiefvater's The Scorpio Races centers on the capall uisce, the vicious and maniacal water horses of Celtic legend.
All these stories are either urban fantasy or overlap our everyday world, but fey-centric tales and fairytale retellings can also take place in historical settings, such as Juliet Marillier's Wildwood Dancing (the twelve Dancing Princesses retold in a Transylvanian setting.) Recently, Katherine Arden's The Bear and The Nightingale returns readers to the Russian setting of Rusalka and Chernevog, but with a  distinct historical cast.

My own Thornspell also has an historical setting in the early to mid-Renaissance period, with the events taking place in  a realm that is almost-but-not-quite the Holy Roman Empire. And Thornspell, of course, brings us full circle because it's a retelling of Sleeping Beauty: in this case, from the perspective of the prince who breaks the spell cast by the wicked fairy — who also features in the story. :-)
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The giveaway has now closed. The result is posted Here

Giveaway!

 I've enjoyed reading all the books mentioned, but if you would like to check out Thornspell I have a copy to give away. To enter, leave a comment below the post with your contact details (so I can get in touch with the winner.) 

I'll make the draw on Saturday 12 May (using RANDOM) and will post the result here and in a fresh post at the top of the masthead, also on Saturday 12. 

(If the winner doesn't get in touch by Thursday 17, I'll redraw and again post the result here.)

Note: Neither I nor the Supernatural Underground will use your contact for any purpose except drawing this giveaway, unless your further permission is sought.

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Helen Lowe is a novelist, poet, interviewer and blogger whose first novel, Thornspell (Knopf), was published to critical praise in 2008. Her second, The Heir of Night (The Wall Of Night Series, Book One) won the Gemmell Morningstar Award 2012. The sequel, The Gathering Of The Lost, was shortlisted for the Gemmell Legend Award in 2013. Daughter Of Blood, (The Wall Of Night, Book Three) is her most recent book and she is currently working on the fourth and final novel in The Wall Of Night series. Helen posts regularly on her “…on Anything, Really” blog and is also on Twitter: @helenl0we

5 comments:

Kim Falconer said...

Great post, Helen. I love thinking about the fey in stories I've read. The Scorpio Races is definitely one of my favorites.

I also like Charlaine Harris's Fey, similar to Patricia Briggs' interpretation in her Urban Fantasy Series Mercy Thompson (Moon Called is the first book). Also, a YA book by Holly Black, The Darkest Part of the Forest has great Fey.

Oh and Kalayna Price's 'Fae' are captivating as well in her Alex Craft series.

The Fey make fantastic anti-heroes, don't you think?

Helen Lowe said...

I agree re the anti-heroes, something Melissa Marr brings out well in her series. I haven't read 'The Darkest Part of the Forest' yet so I shall have to look out for it. :)

Andie said...

One book I don't see on the list is The Broken Sword by Poul Anderson. This is quite an early example of a fey fantasy.

Wild, dark and doomed romance!

Chris Besier said...

I adore fairytale retellings and urban fantasy with the fey and other paranormals. Robin McKinley's "Beauty" is one of my favorites and I've always liked the fae/elves in Tad Williams Dragonbone books Patricia Briggs Mercy Thompson world is one of my go-to's as well!

Count me in for the giveaway. I've been keen to read Thornspell since I read Kate Forsyth's review.

chris[dot]besier[at]gmail[dot]com

Anonymous said...

Love, love, love all things fey, fairy, supernatural!!!!