Children's fantasy explained
Children's fantasy is children's literature with fantasy elements: fantasy intended for young readers. It may also mean fantasy read by children, regardless of the intended audience.
The genre has roots in folk tales such as Aesop's Fables that were not originally intended for children: before the Victorian era, fairytales were perceived as immoral and ill-suited for children's minds. A market for children's fantasy was established in Britain in the 19th century, leading to works such as Lewis Carroll's Alice in Wonderland and Edith Nesbit's Five Children series; the genre also developed in America, exemplified by L. Frank Baum's The Wonderful Wizard of Oz. Of the authors of this period, Nesbit is commonly cited as the creator of modern children's fantasy.
The golden age of children's fantasy, in scholars' view, occurred in the mid-20th century when the genre was influenced by J. R. R. Tolkien's The Hobbit and C. S. Lewis's The Chronicles of Narnia. In the vein of Narnia, the post-war period saw rising stakes and manifestations of evil in the works of Susan Cooper and Alan Garner. Tolkien's Middle-earth led to mythopoeic fantasy in the 1970s, from authors such as Ursula K. Le Guin and Robin McKinley. Another influential writer of this period was Diana Wynne Jones, who wrote both medievalist and realist fantasies.
In the late 1990s, J. K. Rowling's Harry Potter led to a commercial boom in the genre, reviving older authors' careers and spawning many imitators. A concurrent success is Philip Pullman's His Dark Materials, a darker, realistic fantasy that led to a corresponding trend in a new young adult market.
Children's fantasy books and series
The protagonists are usually children or teens who have unique abilities, gifts, possessions or even allies that allow them to face powerful adversaries. Harry Potter is a powerful young wizard, one of the children of The Dark Is Rising series is an immature Old One with magical abilities, and in the His Dark Materials series the children have magical items and animal allies. The plot frequently incorporates a bildungsroman.
In the earlier part of the 20th century, C. S. Lewis noted that fantasy was more accepted in juvenile literature, and therefore a writer interested in fantasy often wrote in it to find an audience.
Forerunners
1900 to 1945
Post-War and 1950s
Late 20th Century
- Maurice Sendak: Where the Wild Things Are
- Joan Aiken: Wolves Chronicles
- Astrid Lindgren: Ronia, the Robber's Daughter, The Brothers Lionheart
- Michael Ende: Momo, The Neverending Story
- Susan Cooper: The Dark Is Rising
- Roald Dahl: Charlie and the Chocolate Factory, James and the Giant Peach, Matilda, The BFG and others
- Diana Wynne Jones: The Lives of Christopher Chant, Charmed Life
- Alan Garner: The Weirdstone of Brisingamen, The Owl Service
- Andre Norton: the Witch World series
- Ursula K. Le Guin: A Wizard of Earthsea and its sequels
- Jill Murphy: The Worst Witch series
- Brian Jacques: the Redwall series
- Anne McCaffrey: the Dragonriders of Pern Harper Hall trilogy
- Madeleine L'Engle: the Time Quartet
- Lloyd Alexander: The Chronicles of Prydain
- Chris Van Allsburg: The Garden of Abdul Gasazi, Jumanji and Zathura, The Polar Express
- Dorota Terakowska: Lustro pana Grymsa (The Mirror of mister Gryms), Babci Brygidy szalona podróż po Krakowie (Grandma Brygida’s Mad Journey through Cracow), Władca Lewawu (The Ruler of Lewaw), Córka czarownic (Witches' Daughter), W krainie Kota (In The Land of the Cat), Samotność Bogów (The Loneliness of the Gods), Tam gdzie spadają anioły (Where the Angels Fall)
- Norton Juster: The Phantom Tollbooth
More recent titles and series
Bartimaeus Sequence and Lockwood & Co.
Fablehaven, Beyonders, and Five Kingdoms series
The Goose Girl and sequels, Princess Academy
Sources
- Encyclopedia: Ashley . Mike . Mike Ashley (writer) . Grant . John . John Grant (author) . Children's fantasy . Clute . John . John Clute . Grant . John . . 1997 . St. Martin's Griffin.
- Book: Beckett, Sandra L. . Crossover Fiction: Global and Historical Perspectives . 2008 . . 10.4324/9780203893135 . 978-0-203-89313-5.
- Book: Cecire, Maria Sachiko . Re-Enchanted: The Rise of Children's Fantasy Literature in the Twentieth Century . 2019 . . 978-1-4529-5943-6 . 1097419657.
- Book: Levy . Michael . Michael M. Levy . Mendlesohn . Farah . Farah Mendlesohn . . 2016 . . 978-1-139-08742-1 . 10.1017/cbo9781139087421.
- Book: Lewis, C. S. . C. S. Lewis . Of Other Worlds: Essays and Stories . registration . 1975 . . 978-0-15-667897-1 . 1132332944.
- Encyclopedia: Nikolajeva . Maria . Maria Nikolajeva . The development of children's fantasy . James . Edward . Edward James (historian) . Mendlesohn . Farah . Farah Mendlesohn . The Cambridge Companion to Fantasy Literature . 2012 . 50–61 . . 10.1017/CCOL9780521429597.006 . 978-0-521-42959-7.
- Book: Townsend, John Rowe . John Rowe Townsend . Fantasy . https://archive.org/details/cambridgeguideto0000unse_o6b3/page/252/mode/2up . registration . Watson . Victor . Victor Watson (author) . The Cambridge Guide to Children's Books in English . 2001 . . 978-0-511-07410-3 . 436845497.
Further reading