St. Fidgeta and Other Parodies, and The Pedant and the
Shuffly: A Fable, by John Bellairs. Illustrated by Marilyn Fitschen.
By an odd coincidence, I was led by to these books by one of
my favorite authors on separate occasions by an irresistible instinct. I found
‘Fidgeta’ on a bargain book shelf in a little used book store near the college;
strangely enough I had been thinking about finding this obscure and
long-out-of-print book as I went in, and there it was: the only copy I’ve ever
seen until it was reprinted in “Magic Mirrors”. A hilarious look at Catholicism
from an amused practitioner. “One of the only other times I can remember that
happening is when I went grimly through the staggering piles of kid’s books at
Half’s, in specific hopes of finding
“The Pedant and the Shuffly” (an obscure book which had been published at least
twenty years before, and THERE IT WAS!” – Power of Babel. The moral of the
fable is, I take it, that the inexplicability of life trumps the reductive nature
of philosophical materialism, as the joyful shambling Shuffly drop-kicks the
sour pedantic Snodrog into a Logical Cleft stick and flies him like a kite on a
string of popcorn.
Ranking: Essential.
File Code: Parody. Fable. Fantasy. Hardback.
Magic Mirrors, by John Bellairs. Cover by Omar Rayyan.
Illustrations by Marilyn Fitschen.
In 2009, the New
England Science Fiction Association Press published Magic Mirrors: The
High Fantasy and Low Parody of John Bellairs. In the
Editor's Preface, Timothy Szczesuil states that there are no hard and
fast criteria for NEFSA choosing an author to publish, but that it is
often "that one particular NEFSA member loves a particular
author enough to be willing to put together a book, and other members agree
that there might be enough like-minded people 'out there' who would like to
have that book." In this case, the editors have brought
together Bellairs' non-juvenile fiction into an easily available omnibus
volume. These works include St. Fidgeta and Other Parodies, The
Pedant and the Shuffly, The Face in the Frost,
and, perhaps most significantly (certainly for
many Bellairs enthusiasts), The Dolphin Cross, the
previously unpublished fragment of a sequel to The Face in the Frost.
While Fidgeta and Pedant have been hard to
find (I was blessed to fortuitously locate both years ago), FF has enjoyed a
long popularity, and its readers have had promises of further adventures of the
wizard Prospero and his friend Roger Bacon dangled in their faces
since at least 1973. That was the year that Lin Carter announced in Imaginary
Worlds (his book on 'epic fantasy') that FF was one of the three best
fantasy books to come out since Tolkien published The Lord of the
Rings. He also claimed that Bellairs had produced a short story
telling how Prospero and Roger Bacon first met, for Carter's planned
anthology, Magic Kingdoms. As it turns out, that volume was never
made, and whether a copy of the story still exists in the enormous but chaotic
files that Carter left when he passed away is a moot but tantalizing point.
Apparently, none existed in Bellairs' own archive when he passed away in
1991. What is known is that Bellairs never quite
abandoned Prospero and the South Kingdom, and according to testimony
by both Carter and Bellairs' son Frank (who himself passed away in 1999)
he had a file of notes, maps, and outlines for the wizard and his world.
Whether this file still exists or went by way of the stove in the backyard
where he apparently burned old work from time to time
is anybody's guess. What is now known is that he sent a copy of the
extant 130 pages of so of The Dolphin Cross to
Ellen Kushner, the author responsible for getting the rights for paperback
publishing of FF for Ace, and it is thanks to her efforts that we now have a
last glimpse of Prospero and his world. The Dolphin Cross begins
some six months after the story of FF, and Prospero is soaking up the
joys of spring in the backyard of his eccentrically anachronistic
home. Soon he is having bad dreams of marching armies, however, and is caught
up in the machinations of the mysterious Othamar, who is apparently trying
to unite the little realms of the South Kingdom under his rule. Although it
seems obvious he has magical help himself, Othamar is down on wizards
and sorcerers, and most of the action of The Dolphin Cross is Prospero's imprisonment
and escape, first from exile on a little island and then from an evil magician
calling himself the Bishop. Along the way there is plenty of the beautifully
observed nature, eccentric characters, and nightmare imagery that made FF the
uniquely wonderful experience that it is. If The Dolphin Cross seems
a darker work, it is perhaps because it stops in the middle of the tale, where
things look bleakest in most stories. Magic Mirrors is a must have
for any Bellairs fan, and not only for The Dolphin Cross.
Seeing Marilyn Fitschen's illustrations for FF in the larger, clearer
hardback format is something of a revelation, and the Appendix
translating Bellairs' Latin quotations (he had degrees from
both Notre Dame and the University of Chicago) is very handy. But I
also enjoyed the insights and reminiscences of John Bellairs' character
revealed in the editor's preface, introduction, and the prefatory note to The
Dolphin Cross, especially Bellairs characterization of
himself as "a sporadically shy person, and a permanently eccentric
one." John Bellairs claimed he gave Prospero his own
"phobias and crochets"; Magic Mirrors, as even the cover
art by Omar Rayyan seems to suggest, is a loving last look at a great
wizard and a great author.
Ranking: Essential.
File Code: Fantasy. Anthology. Hardback.
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