Colin Manlove

Colin Nicholas Manlove (born 1942) is a literary critic with a particular interest in fantasy. Modern Fantasy: Five Studies (1975, published as by C. N. Manlove), which considers at length works by Charles Kingsley, George MacDonald, C. S. Lewis, J. R. R. Tolkien and Mervyn Peake was written at a time when "no serious study of the subject [of fantasy literature] has appeared".[1] In it he posits a definition of fantasy as:

A fiction evoking wonder and containing a substantial and irreducible element of supernatural or impossible worlds, beings or objects with which the mortal characters in the story or the readers become on at least partly familiar terms.

His conclusion, however, is negative: each of the five major writers whose work he considered failed to sustain their original vision.[2]

He was a lecturer in English Literature at the University of Edinburgh until his retirement in 1993.[3]

Criticism

Anthologies

Notes

  1. Modern Fantasy: Five Studies, Preface, p. vii
  2. Modern Fantasy: Five Studies, p. 258
  3. Children's literature expert to speak at Sectus 2007
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