THE URBANE GUIDE TO URBAN FANTASY
8/7/2016
To celebrate the launch day for Angela Slatter's Vigil, Ginger Nuts of Horror have put together a personal list of their favourite urban fantasy novels and TV shows. You might be surprised as to what we think comes under the umbrella of Urbane fantasy. Please leave a comment below letting us know what you think So grab a coffee and a biscuit, and find out what urban fantasy books have floated our boat over the years, with thanks to Duncan Ralston, Joe Young, Jonathan Thornton and Charlotte Courtney Bond, for their contributions. Click on any of the images to purchase the items featured in this article. WEAVEWORLD"Nothing ever begins," the narrator—or perhaps Clive Barker himself—assures us in the opening paragraph of Weaveworld. "There is no first moment; no single word or place from which this or any other story begins." Thus begins young Cal Mooney's journey from purposeless shop clerk to caretaker of the Seerkind, a race of people who possess the ability to create magic, hunted down and nearly annihilated by an evil entity called the Scourge. Weaveworld was my introduction to Clive Barker's what might now be classified as "urban fantasy" novels. I still remember fondly spending an entire summer coming up with my own worlds to write about, based on the ideas I'd read in Weaveworld and Imajica. Those books together opened doors in my imagination I never knew existed. Creatively, I've always felt Barker had no challenger in the horror world, and it's dark urban fantasies like these two that prove it. Barker called himself, in that time, not a horror writer, or even a fantasy writer, but a fantasist, or a writer of the fantastique. Weaveworld is nothing if not fantastic. The writing was literary, yet fluid and concise. Never stilted. The dialogue was very "British" for a young Canadian reader, particularly for a story which (I think?) took place in America. But that never bothered me. Barker was unafraid to peel back the skin of reality and expose the rotted flesh beneath. His writing has always struck a chord with me, particularly these early works of "fantasy," which often bordered if not crossed fully into horror. Note: In researching this, I have learned that the CW will potentially be redeveloping Weaveworld for American TV. Since Disney dropped the planned Abarat series of movies, this comes as unexpected great news. Since American Gods is being developed for HBO, following the success of Game of Thrones and The Shanara Chronicles, maybe dark adult fantasy's time on television has come around at last. ‘THE TWILIGHT ZONE’: THE GENESIS OF MODERN URBAN FANTASY |
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