George MacDonald: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
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* [[Too Good for This Sinful Earth]]
* [[Too Good for This Sinful Earth]]
* [[The Vamp]]: [[Lilith]] in her eponymous novel, and the Maiden of the Alder-Tree in ''Phantastes''.
* [[The Vamp]]: [[Lilith]] in her eponymous novel, and the Maiden of the Alder-Tree in ''Phantastes''.
* [[What Could Have Been]]: MacDonald once proposed to an American literary friend that they should collaborate on a novel in order to secure copyright on both sides of the Atlantic. The friend's name? [[Mark Twain]]. Unfortunately the project never transpired. However, scholars have pointed out some similarities between MacDonald's ''Sir Gibbie'' and Twain's ''[[Huckleberry Finn]]'', suggesting that perhaps they discussed such a story together. [http://www.george-macdonald.com/resources/mark_twain.html\]
* [[What Could Have Been]]: MacDonald once proposed to an American literary friend that they should collaborate on a novel in order to secure copyright on both sides of the Atlantic. The friend's name? [[Mark Twain]]. Unfortunately the project never transpired. However, scholars have pointed out some similarities between MacDonald's ''Sir Gibbie'' and Twain's ''[[Huckleberry Finn]]'', suggesting that perhaps they discussed such a story together. [https://web.archive.org/web/20150911131715/http://www.george-macdonald.com/resources/mark_twain.html]
* [[Writer on Board]]
* [[Writer on Board]]
** An example that even this [[Tropes Are Not Bad|trope is not bad]]. [[C. S. Lewis|CS Lewis]] observed of Macdonald's non-fantasy novels, "Sometimes they diverge into direct and prolonged preachments which would be intolerable if a man were reading for the story, but which are in fact welcome because the author... is a supreme preacher."
** An example that even this [[Tropes Are Not Bad|trope is not bad]]. [[C. S. Lewis|CS Lewis]] observed of Macdonald's non-fantasy novels, "Sometimes they diverge into direct and prolonged preachments which would be intolerable if a man were reading for the story, but which are in fact welcome because the author... is a supreme preacher."

Revision as of 17:34, 16 September 2018

/wiki/George MacDonaldcreator

George MacDonald was a Victorian Scottish writer chiefly known for his fantasy works, which were read by such authors as GK Chesterton, JRR Tolkien, and CS Lewis. They include At the Back of the North Wind, Lilith, Phantastes, The Princess and the Goblin, The Princess and Curdie, and The Light Princess. He also wrote a fair number of non-fantasy works, primarily concerned with romance, suffering and adventure in the Highlands, which are generally passed over for some reason.

Other writers who cited MacDonald as an influence include WH Auden, Roger Lancelyn Green, Madeleine L'Engle, E. Nesbit, and Elizabeth Yates.

He is not George Macdonald Fraser.

Works by George MacDonald with their own trope pages include:


His other works provide examples of:


George MacDonald in fiction: