Tales Before Narnia: The Roots of Modern Fantasy and Science Fiction by Douglas A. Anderson

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(Paperback)

  • Pub. Date: March 2008
  • 352pp
  • Sales Rank: 534,198
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    Product Details

    • Pub. Date: March 2008
    • Publisher: Random House Publishing Group
    • Format: Paperback, 352pp
    • Sales Rank: 534,198

    Synopsis

    In his acclaimed collection Tales Before Tolkien, Douglas A. Anderson illuminated the sources, inspirations, and influences that fired J.R.R. Tolkien’s genius. Now Anderson turns his attention to Tolkien’s colleague and friend C. S. Lewis, whose influence on modern fantasy, through his beloved Narnia books, is second only to Tolkien’s own.

    In many ways, Lewis’s influence has been even wider than Tolkien’s. For in addition to the Narnia series, Lewis wrote groundbreaking works of science fiction, urban fantasy, and religious allegory, and he came to be regarded as among the most important Christian writers of the twentieth century. It will come as no surprise, then, that such a wide-ranging talent drew inspiration from a variety of sources. Here are twenty of the tributaries that fed Lewis’s unique talent, among them:

    “The Wood That Time Forgot: The Enchanted Wood,” taken from a never-before-published fantasy by Lewis’s biographer and friend, Roger Lancelyn Green, that directly inspired The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe; E. Nesbit’s charming “The Aunt and Amabel,” in which a young girl enters another world by means of a wardrobe; “The Snow Queen,” by Hans Christian Andersen, featuring the abduction of a young boy by a woman as cruel as she is beautiful; and many more, including works by Charles Dickens, Kenneth Grahame, G. K. Chesterton, and George MacDonald, of whom Lewis would write, “I have never concealed the fact that I regarded him as my master.”

    Full of fascinating insights into Lewis’s life and fiction, Tales Before Narnia is the kind of bookthat will be treasured by children and adults alike and passed down lovingly from generation to generation.

    Roger Berger - Library Journal

    A compilation of relatively obscure short stories, fantasy and folk tales, poems, and other imaginative texts by authors ranging from Charles Dickens and Sir Walter Scott to Stevenson, Chesterton, and Tolkien, this volume offers an interesting though necessarily idiosyncratic collection of work that may have influenced C.S. Lewis. As Lewis, a literary scholar and intellectual, was one of the best-read writers of his time, any one-volume anthology would be inherently incapable of providing an adequate or even representative selection of stories, poems, and other texts that he may well have read. Yet this volume still offers a glimpse at the textual environment Lewis inhabited and loved and would therefore be exceptionally useful in a class on Lewis-or just for someone interested in Lewis's work. It also would provide an attractive anthology for younger readers, especially those interested in fantasy (exemplified in the stories by Owen Barfield and William Morris). The collection, which claims to offer background material for both modern fantasy and science fiction, ultimately emphasizes the former over the latter. Recommended for larger fantasy and literature collections.-Roger Berger, Everett Community Coll., WA

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    Biography

    Douglas A. Anderson, a leading American Tolkien scholar, is acknowledged as the worldwide expert on the textual history of The Hobbit and The Lord of the Rings, and has contributed the textual notes for all Houghton Mifflin editions of these titles for more than a decade. He has been a bookseller, in Ithaca, New York and northwest Indiana. He now lives in southwestern Michigan. He is the editor of The Annotated Hobbit.

    Customer Reviews

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    interesting anthologyby harstan

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    March 29, 2008: The twenty-one short stories, poems, essays and other writings that make up this collection are considered by editor Douglas A. Anderson as the sub-title states The Roots of Modern Fantasy and Science Fiction. Though this reviewer has some doubts about that assertion, the entries are well written and entertaining from a who?s who of literature (Dickens, Tolkien, Grahame, Stevenson, Wells, Potter, Clarke and Kipling, etc) even though the authors were in many case key players (no novels are included which in my opinion would be more likely to be influential). The contributions are excellent with the little notes prefacing them adding to the fun as Mr. Anderson explains the author?s link to C.S. Lewis. The anthology provides a glimpse into the science fiction-fantasy short writings that were out there prior to Narnia, written in the early 1950s. As he did with the equally delightful TALES BEFORE TOLKIEN, Mr. Anderson provides a strong, enlightening and fun to read compilation hard to resist ?a never before published story? The Wood That Time Forgot: The Enchanted Wood by Roger Lancelyn Green (Lewis? biographer) that inspired THE LION, THE WITCH, AND THE WARDROBE. --- Harriet Klausner