This guide to approximately 1,000 fantasy titles helps you advise fantasy readers, find fantasy read-alikes, and learn more about the genre and its fans.
This guide to approximately 1,000 fantasy titles helps you advise fantasy readers, find fantasy read-alikes, and learn more about the genre and its fans.
Introduction
Chapter 1: Epic Fantasy
Chapter 2: Heroic Fantasy
Chapter 3: Witches, Wizards, Enchantresses, and Magicians
Chapter 4: Saga, Myth, and Legend
Chapter 5: Fairy Tales
Chapter 6: A Bestiary
Chapter 7: World of Faerie
Chapter 8: Alternate and Parallel Worlds
Chapter 9: Time Travel
Chapter 10: Mythic Reality
Chapter 11: Genreblending
Chapter 12: Shared World and Tie-In Fantasy
Chapter 13: Fantasy Short Fiction
Chapter 14: Resources
Organizations and Conventions
Appendix: Award Winning Fantasy
Appendix: Humorous Fantasy
Index
Diana Tixier Herald, winner of the Margaret E. Monroe
Library Adult Services Award, is program and outreach manager at
Delta County Libraries, Delta, CO, and an author, readers' advisory
consultant, workshop presenter, and speaker.
Bonnie Kunzel is Youth Services Coordinator, New Jersey
State Library, and is former president of ALA's Young Adult
Services Association (YALSA).
This update to Herald's Fluent in Fantasy: A Guide to Reading
Interests (Libraries Unlimited, 1999) features many titles
published in the interim. The organization is quite similar, with
many identically titled chapters and others that are expanded from
sections in the previous volume….This resource should prove helpful
for anyone looking for fantasy beyond the YA shelves.
*School Library Journal*
This newest entry in the Genreflecting Advisory Series divides the
vast fantasy genre into chapters covering its popular subgenres, to
help fans and their librarian reader advisors drill down to the
kinds of fantasy litearture that will interested them
most….Although many of the entries for individual titles are only
brief plot summaries rather than reviews, the appendices include
lists of award-winning titles, an additional bibliography of
history and criticism, reference books, and a wide variety of other
supplemental sources, both online and in print. Finally, there are
author, title, and subject indexes to aid the search for specific
titles. Like many of the other entries in the series, this
biblography is a good starting point for the librarian confronting
a young reader who is interested in a particular aspect of fantasy,
or is unsure of where to dive in first.
*Oklahoma Librarian*
The authors' obvious appreciation of the fantasy genre adds life to
this text. The well-stated purpose is fulfilled in a
straightforward way, and well-documented references help ground
this book in both past and present scholarship related to the
genre. Thoughtful details about locating fantasy books in
nonfiction collections and genreblending will be appreciated by
library support staff and new librarians.
*VOYA*
[M]ore than 2,000 titles are arranged by author in 14 thematic
chapters, including Epic Fantasy, Arthurian Legend, and Time Travel
Romance….The guide will be welcomed by anyone who used the previous
edition and by librarians who need help satisfying readers' growing
interest in the fantasy genre. An essential collection development
and readers'-advisory tool.
*Booklist, Starred Review*
A guide to current fantasy titles, arranged in thirteen thematic
categories. This revised edition includes over 2000 titles either
new or newly described.
*Reference & User Services Quarterly*
Bottom line: Herald and Kunzel have a winner here that will cover
the best over time until the end of 2007.
*Teacher Librarian*
Useful for any adult librarian who wishes to know more about
fantasy works, or for the researcher who desires additional
information on the genre of fantasy, this work continues the great
work in the Genreflecting Advisory Series from this publisher.
*ARBA*
With the rise in popularity of fantasy titles and the appeal of the
genre to all age groups, public librarians and high school library
media specialists need a way to keep track of these books that are
important to their library's users. Fluent in Fantasy: The Next
Generation is an excellent, user-friendly resource for librarians
that provides pertinent information on fantasy titles for all
readers.
*Public Libraries*
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