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| Brian G. Turner | Low Fantasy I'm under the impression there's a subgenre called "low fantasy" where you have your classic ancient/mediaeval-style world, but the use of magic is very limited - as opposed to "high fantasy" where magic drives everything. So far Guy Gavriel Kay's works seem to fit this bill. However, am looking out for suggestions of anything else that might fit this, too. |
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| Senior Member Join Date: Aug 2010 Location: North Dakota
Posts: 1,646
| Re: Low Fantasy Quote:
Btw, it was paperbacked by Lancer in the Sixties as being "Tolkienian." | |
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| Fantastical historian Join Date: Sep 2007 Location: Cambridgeshire
Posts: 1,369
| Re: Low Fantasy Ellen Kushner's Riverside books (Swordspoint, The Privilege of the Sword) are low fantasy, in fact they have no magic at all! The first book in my own trilogy is pretty low fantasy as well - there's some magic going on, but most of what the characters think is magic is actually fairly advanced technology |
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| Dangerously confused Join Date: Apr 2011 Location: New Zealand (Aotorea)
Posts: 374
| Re: Low Fantasy Hi, I wasn't aware that there was such a genre. I thought, and I could well be wrong, that high fantasy was the Tolkein style stuff. Elves, dwarves, magic and epic quests. So logically low fantasy would be the fantasy that doesn't take this road. But equally this could be traditional fantasy and non-traditional. Cheers, Greg. |
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| Fantastical historian Join Date: Sep 2007 Location: Cambridgeshire
Posts: 1,369
| Re: Low Fantasy Quote:
I get that it isn't everyone's cup of tea, but as someone who grew up on soft SF I actually prefer low fantasy to the fireballs'n'dragons school of high fantasy - which is one of the reasons I've delayed reading the rest of ASOIAF ![]() * Except the prologue and the last few chapters | |
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| Senior Member Join Date: Jan 2008 Location: Hertfordshire
Posts: 1,217
| Re: Low Fantasy I agree with Anne. I clicked on this thread thinking that low fantasy would be about people who weren't mighty nobles doing stuff that didn't involve saving/conquering the world, but if it just means "not much magic" then I'm happy with that. After all, not every crime drama includes machine guns, and it doesn't have to in order to be good. |
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| Pretentious Avatar Alert. | Re: Low Fantasy Quote:
Going by your definition, have you checked out Iain M. Banks' Inversions. Absolutely no magic in that one. Sort of. But the 'magic' isn't really magic... | |
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| Fantastical historian Join Date: Sep 2007 Location: Cambridgeshire
Posts: 1,369
| Re: Low Fantasy Quote:
![]() The humans have the level of technology you'd expect for the late 16th century. The skraylings have an aptitude for chemistry and pharmacology that gives them some highly advanced technology such as chemoluminescents, but in other respects they are at a similar tech level to the most advanced Native American civilisations who are their neighbours (basically Neolithic verging on Bronze Age). I was partially inspired in this by the Ancient Egyptians, who had some surprisingly sophisticated skills (faking precious metals and gems) early in the Bronze Age. I admit there's a certain amount of handwaving on the tech side - but that's one of the reasons it's fantasy, not SF. I try to make it believable but I don't poke into the scientific detail too much. I'm writing for fun! | |
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