Reading “Shadow” by Anne Logston (Shadow 1)

Anne Logston’s Shadow (1991) introduced a talented new fantasy writer with a tightly plotted, elegantly written, hilariously bawdy adventure about an expert thief who gets in over her head when she robs the wrong person. If you like Xena: Warrior Princess or Baldur's Gate 3, then you'll love Shadow.

Reading “The Eye of the World” by Robert Jordan (Wheel of Time 1)

Robert Jordan's The Eye of the World (1990) is the titanic first novel in his Wheel of Time series (1990-2013), yet for all its prominence in the fantasy field, it has rarely been given serious critical attention by fantasy scholars.

Ballantine Adult Fantasy: Reading “Titus Groan” by Mervyn Peake (Gormenghast 1)

The fifth essay in my Ballantine Adult Fantasy reading series, which looks at Mervyn Peake’s Titus Groan (1946): an atmospheric, richly wrought novel about power and social hierarchy in a castle populated by absolute weirdos, and how it all starts to crack up.

Ballantine Adult Fantasy: Reading “A Fish Dinner in Memison” by E.R. Eddison (Zimiamvia 2)

The fourth essay in my Ballantine Adult Fantasy reading series, which looks at E.R. Eddison’s A Fish Dinner in Memison (1941): a novel that lays out plainly Eddison's concerning philosophical vision.

Reading “Firedrake” by Richard A. Knaak (Dragonrealm 1)

Richard A. Knaak’s Firedrake (1989), the first in his Dragonrealms series, is a atrociously written male fantasy that represents some of the worst excesses of 1980s fantasy fiction, perfectly captures the era's crisis of masculinity, and features an ancient empire of armadillo-people.

Ballantine Adult Fantasy: Reading “Mistress of Mistresses” by E.R. Eddison (Zimiamvia 1)

The third essay in my Ballantine Adult Fantasy reading series, which looks at E.R. Eddison’s Mistress of Mistresses (1935): an exquisitely written but ultimately dull novel about beauty, pleasure, and power.

Reading “The Tournament of Thorns” by Thomas Burnett Swann

Thomas Burnett Swann’s The Tournament of Thorns (1976) is a compelling medievalist fantasy that mixes in folk horror and offers a sharp critique of Christianity in the time of crusades.

Reading “Lady of the Bees” by Thomas Burnett Swann

Thomas Burnett Swann’s Lady of the Bees (1976) offers a direct political and ethical response to modernity by way of its inventive fantasy retelling of the mythological founding of Rome, casting that key moment in “Western civilization” as a tragedy.

Ballantine Adult Fantasy: Reading “The Worm Ouroboros” by E.R. Eddison

The second essay in Ballantine Adult Fantasy: A Reading Series, which looks at E.R. Eddison’s The Worm Ouroboros (1922): a complex, challenging, rewarding, hero-obsessed novel.

Reading “Land of Precious Snow” by Thaddeus Tuleja

Thaddeus Tuleja's Land of Precious Snow (1977) is a fantasy-adjacent historical fiction novel about religious and spiritual experience, disaffection with modernity, and an American adventurer seeking new meaning in 1890s Tibet—a novel that captures counterculture's dissident feelings toward life in postwar America.