Monday, October 27, 2025

Favorite Fantasy Series : Let's Discuss

 JENN McKINLAYOn the eve of the release of my first fantasy novel -- WITCHES OF DUBIOUS ORIGIN drops tomorrow, in case you have inexplicably missed me talking about it for the past six months -- I’m thinking about the fantasy genre in general and, frankly, what books landed me here. 


The earliest fantasy book I can remember reading is C. S. Lewis’s The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe. I still think it has the most perfect title ever and I know it was particularly compelling to me because it merged the real world with an alternate one. For me, having a fantasy novel that has one foot in the known world always makes it that much more compelling. The next most impactful fantasy of my childhood was A Wrinkle in Time by Madeleine L’Engle, yet another perfect title. After that I was ready to step into a fully realized high fantasy which I did with Anne McCaffrey’s series the Dragonriders of Pern. From there, fantasy joined my love of mysteries and romance, making me a fully realized genre reader.


How about you, Reds? What are your favorite fantasy novels or are you a hard pass?


RHYS BOWEN:  when I first learned to read it was the Faraway Tree and the Wishing Chair. Then, like Jenn, the Narnia books, all leading up to the Lord of the Rings, my favorite book ever!!! As an adult I have enjoyed Anne McCaffrey and Ursula LeGuin but more recent fantasies have either been too dark or seem like pale copies. You know: Tom the fisher boy is the only one who can save the kingdom from the curse of Yurg! 




LUCY BURDETTE: First let it be said that I’ve preordered Jenn’s book and can’t wait to read it! But…when I read the question, I thought, I don’t read fantasy. Then I read further…of course I read and loved THE LION, THE WITCH, AND THE WARDROBE  and A WRINKLE IN TIME. Plus, funnily enough Rhys, I’ve downloaded THE LORD OF THE RINGS and we are listening to it on our way south!


DEBORAH CROMBIE: Yes, so excited about Jenn’s book and I have it pre-ordered! I do read fantasy, and it sounds like we have most of the same fantasy lineage. I think my first foray was A WRINKLE IN TIME, then the Narnia books, then THE HOBBIT and THE LORD OF THE RINGS, then T.H. White’s THE ONCE AND FUTURE KING. I read McCaffrey and too many other fun things to name. I love Phillip Pullman’s AMBER SPYGLASS trilogy, and now there are more books continuing Lyra’s story. Apparently they are read by Michael Sheen so I think I’ll be going with the audio version of those! Lucy, I’ve been listening to THE FELLOWSHIP OF THE RING and have almost finished it–the narration is so good!



HALLIE EPHRON: I’ve been a huge fan of fantasy, starting with The Wizard of Oz which I read to myself when I was in fourth grade, along with the 15 or so sequels (The Marvelous Land of Oz, Ozma of Oz…) by L. Frank Baum (not so much the sequels by other writers.)


JENN: I remember reading The Wonderful Wizard of Oz to the hooligans when they were little and I was SHOCKED to discover the ruby slippers are...silver!!!

Later, The Once and Future King. The Golden Compass. The Golden Compass. All the fairy tales, especially the ones Disney adapted. Most of the works of Roald Dahl (The BFG! The Witches…). And of course, the Harry Potter books. 


And me, too! I’ve pre-ordered and cannot wait to dig into Jenn’s Witches of Dubious Origin.




JULIA SPENCER-FLEMING: Jenn, I loved all those series you mentioned! Some others I’ve loved enough to read over and over: Lois McMaster Bujold’s Sharing Knife and World of the Five Gods series. She made her mark as a highly regarded SF writer and is just as gifted at fantasy. 


I adore Sharon Shinn’s Twelve Houses series, and after umpteen years she has a new novel set in that world coming out, so it’s the perfect time to catch up! Suzanna Clarke knocked me and the rest of the reading world out with JONATHAN STRANGE & MR. NORRELL. Katherine Addison (pen name for Sarah Monette) has an amazing five book series that began with THE GOBLIN EMPEROR, which was shortlisted for all the major Fantasy/SF awards. 




JENN: LOVED both Addison's and Clarke's books. SO good!


And finally, another of my fave SF writers, Martha Wells, has begun a new fantasy series that I loved almost as much as I love her Murderbot books. WITCH KING is the first novel, and its sequel, QUEEN DEMON, was just released this month!



HANK PHILLIPPI RYAN: Oh, yes, you chose some wonderful and foundational examples!  Let me add The Diamond in The Window by Jane Langton–it’s in the “smart kids use their wits and determination to succeed” genre–my fave, especially for a nerdy kid like I was. Am.  Also The Wonderful Flight to the Mushroom Planet by Eleanor Cameron!  Oh, an my very total complete and life-long favorites are the Edward Eager fantasies–The Time Garden, and Knight’s Castle (where the four smart kids find themselves in Ivanhoe, and since one of them has read it, they know what to do) and Half Magic, where the secret amulet or coin or whatever it is will give you your wish, but  only half of it. So you have to wish for twice as much as you want. Which can be difficult–how to do you ask to be half-again twice not-here?

Once and Future King–I bet I think of that every day. And of course, Narnia. And all the Phillip Pullman, I could not believe how incredible the The Golden Compass is. (NOT the movie!)

Recently, though. Hmm.  

But of course Jenn’s is pre-ordered!

JENN: Hank, I loved The Diamond in the Window - I can still see the cover in my mind and remember finding it on the library shelves when I was a kid. So good!


Thank you all for the enthusiasm!!! It's very exciting to leap into a new genre.


How about you, Readers? Fantasy lover or no?


20 comments:

  1. Yes to those wonderful afore-mentioned tales: Chronicles of Narnia, A Wrinkle in Time, the Ring Trilogy, The Wizard of Oz . . . add Blake Crouch's "Dark Matter" as one more recently-read. And add me to the list of those who've pre-ordered "Witches of Dubious Origin" . . . .

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  2. Congratulations, Jenn! I'm looking forward to reading your first fantasy.

    I also started young with the genre, with the original Oz books and the Mushroom Planet books. I might be the only person alive who hasn't read the Narnia books, but maybe I'll read them to Ida Rose when she gets a little older. I didn't discover the Ring Trilogy or A Wrinkle in Time (although, isn't that science fiction?) until I was an adult, and loved them, plus all the Harry Potter books, of course.

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  3. Jenn, congratulations on the impending release of your new book!

    I was 5 when my older brother, 8, had an operation for cancer and our mother read THE LION, THE WITCH, AND THE WARDROBE to us three younger kids (8, 5, 3) while he recuperated after surgery. I adored it and later read all of the rest of the books. I loved A WRINKLE IN TIME but not enough to pursue Madeleine L' Engle's other fiction. Tolkien was huge among adults when I was nine or ten and I got a lot of attention from friends of my parents for reading all of his books. However I read them simply because I read everything around the house that wasn't "a Jesus book." (My parents were truly devoted Episcopalians and our bookshelves reflected this.) Anyway, as with many other titles, I read Tolkien too young and did not enjoy/understand the books well enough to ever wish to revisit them, nor have I ever watched the movies. I was a fearful child -- I left the room during the annual broadcast of THE WIZARD OF OZ, to the jeers of my siblings -- and Gollum made a dread impression. While I bought fantasy for my kids, who both love it, I've avoided it as an adult. (Selden)

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    1. Selden, since I came to L’Engle’s Wrinkle because she wrote “Jesus books”, your comment made me smile. Elisabeth

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  4. Like Lucy, an immediate “no fantasy here”… but two or three Christmases ago, I discovered
    “The Dark Is Rising” by Susan Cooper. BBC had a podcast of its radio play version, original broadcast was over the 12 Days of Christmas. Read the book, then read the earlier books and then the later books since. Read Madeline L’Engle’s books not as fiction, but as part of her philosophical faith writings, also as an adult. Elisabeth

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    1. Elisabeth, I too am a "no fantasy" kneejerk but am remembering other titles as people mention them. I read THE DARK IS RISING books in my early 20s (introduced by my future husband) and enjoyed them. (Selden)

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  5. And yay, Jenn, for Dubious Origins! Elisabeth

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  6. My fantasy reading mostly consists of books with only some elements of fantasy like talking animals or little people. Charlotte’s Web, Stuart Little, Beverly Cleary’s Ralph Mouse books, The Borrowers.Peter Pan. I liked the Inkheart trilogy by Cornelia Funke where characters come out of books to the real world and people from the real world enter the books. I also really like the Airborn books by Kenneth Oppel…fantasy, a little historical, a little romance all wrapped in one. My fantasy reading is also mostly YA.

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    1. You remind me that I also loved Stuart Little and all the Borrowers books.

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    2. yes yes adore Stuart Little and I just gave the first Borrowers to my granddaughter this summer.

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    3. Oh, me, too, Brenda and Edith! (Selden)

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  7. Congratulations Jenn!

    Oh man! So many from my childhood. I still have George MacDonald's The Princess and Curdie and The Princess and the Goblin on my bookshelf. We also loved E.Nesbit--particularly The Phoenix and the Carpet. Narnia--all 8 books. Many of Madeleine L'Engle's (if you want a beautiful book about dying, read A Ring of Endless Light--although I didn't read it til I was grown up) One summer mom read us The Hobbit out loud in the backyard and then my twin and I read and reread The Lord of the Rings--every winter holiday for years. More recently, I really enjoyed the Martha Wells's The Murderbot Diaries and Connie Willis's Blackout and All Clear.

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    1. And of course mom had a collection of Oz books from her childhood. We read and reread those.

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  8. Jenn, your book is on the way but I bet the audiobook is already here! I do love fantasy but haven't read that much of it. HALF MAGIC was my favorite book as a child. Most of the other books and series for kids I missed. I should go back and read all the books you've mentioned now. I read THE HOBBIT and TLOTR as an adult, then read them to Jonathan when he was five. That gave him a life-long love of fantasy. I also reread that series from time to time and I have listened to the original audiobooks.
    Jenn, congratulations on all of the kudos and notice you've been getting. I love the Museum of Literature series an hope to see some old friends on the page.

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  9. At the top of my list would have to be Lewis Carroll's "Alice's Adventures in Wonderland" ...my second most favorite book after "A Christmas Carol" by Charles Dickens. I'm veering off course a bit here but I always loved the 1939 film of Frank Baum's book "The Wonderful Wizard of Oz" and faithfully watched it as a child in the 1950's when it was released annually on television. (I would love to see the newest version of it at Sphere in Las Vegas.)

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    1. Oh, of course, Alice! How could we forget!

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  10. P.S. Jenn ~ I love the name of your FIRST fantasy novel..."Witches of Dubious Origin". Congratulations on its release tomorrow...how exciting!!!

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  12. Loved many of the children's books mentioned - Tolkien, Pullman, Lewis.... and eagerly awaiting Jenn's from the library. Now it's Jodi Taylor's Chronicles of St. Mary's & Time Police books - fantasy-historicals (time travel but never call it that) or Ben Aaronvich's Rivers of London series for urban fantasy. But, for me, the grand master of fantasy was Terry Pratchett, who we lost way too soon. Dragons and witches sure, but underneath biting social satire and laugh out loud funny.

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  13. (I made the mistake of posting before proofing. Let's see if I get this right this time.0

    Looking forward to Jenn's latest.

    I read LOTR in the original Ace paperbacks (before they were pulled in favor of the Ballantine editions), and it knocked my fairly young socks off. But then came the imitatators with their multi-volume tomes, poor imaginations, poorer plots, and even poorer writing. I have avoided most high fantasy since then. I did enjoy Narnia, but much preferred OZ. I also enjoyed Edward Eager's "Magic" books and E. Nesbit's stories about the Five Children. I'm still very partial to Terry Pratchett's Discworld series. A bit off topic (but not really, because it is at heart a fantasy series) are F. Paul Wilson's Repairman Jack books, which also fit comfortably into the suspense-thriller-horror categories. The Repairman Jack books are a subset of Wilson's Adversary Cylcle, which, in turn, is part of his Secret History of the World. No fairy princesses, magical kingdoms, elves, or dragons here -- which works well for me. Too much of modern fantasy is just too twee.

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