For the Childlike: George MacDonald's Fantasies for Children
Roderick McGillis, ed.
242 pp.
1992
ISBN 0-8108-2459-0
$31.00
George MacDonald (1824-1905) is one of the great Victorians, friend to John Ruskin, Lewis Carroll, and Arthur Hughes, among others. He wrote in virtually all the genres - fiction, drama, sermons, poetry, criticism, fantasy - but is perhaps best remembered as one of the greatest and most enduringly influential of the Victorian writers for children. Sixteen essays - five reprints and eleven original - analyze MacDonald's work for children. All the full-length fantasies - At the Back of the North Wind, The Princess and the Goblin, The Princess and Curdie, The Lost Princess - and the major short pieces - "The Light Princess," "The Golden Key," "Cross Purposes," "The Giant's Heart" - receive extended commentary.
Contributors: Celia Anderson, Melba Battin, A. Waller Hastings, Cynthia Marshall, Rod McGillis, Michael Mendelson, Nancy-Lou Patterson, Stephen Prickett, William Raeper, Frank Riga, Cordelia Sherman, Joseph Sigman, Lesley Smith, and Nancy Willard.
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