The Works of George MacDonald

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Phantastes

George MacDonald’s first major fiction work, in his words “a sort of fairy tale for grown people,” Phantastes was published in 1858 by Smith, Elder & Co., London.

This unusual fantasy, subtitled A Fairie Romance, is one of MacDonald’s most mysterious and esoteric titles. The book’s narrator, Anodos, enters Fairy Land through a mysterious old wooden secretary. From that beginning, he embarks on a dream-like series of encounters that follow the form of an epic quest, though the purpose and destination of his journey remain obscure and are never fully clarified.

Two volumes of poetry prior to this had set MacDonald apart as a talented young author to watch in England's literary circles. Sales of Phantastes, however, proved a disappointment, and thus MacDonald ultimately turned to the writing of realistic fiction in the 1860s.

When young atheist C.S. Lewis discovered Phantastes in 1916, within a few hours he said he knew he “had crossed a great frontier.” MacDonald’s unusual fantasy set Lewis on the road toward his eventual conversion to Christianity, and forever after he referred to MacDonald as his “master.”

In spite of its poor initial reception among Victorian readers, Lewis’s affection for it established Phantastes as one of MacDonald’s most enduring and studied works in literary and academic circles.

(Source: The Cullen Collection)

Recommended Editions and Adaptions

WRITTEN WORKS

From Johannesen Printing & Publishing (hardcover)

Annotated Scholarly Edition, edited by Pennington and McGillis
In addition to the text, there are 184 pages containing an authoritative introduction, life chronology, textual notes, book reviews, and comparative source materials. With 354 footnotes to explain obscure words and literary references

150th Anniversary Edition, edited by Nick Page, illustrations by Arthur Hughes

Cullen Collection edition, with introduction by Michael Phillips

OTHER MEDIA

YouTube Audiobook

Room to Roam: Poem from Phantastes, recited by David Jack

Phantastes: The Album, by Caleb Hayashida
"I hope that for those who haven’t read the book the music will encourage you to do so, and for those who have read it the music will help you to see some of the beauty I see in Phantastes."

Articles about Phantastes

VARIOUS SOURCES

Romanticism, the Marble Lady, and Orders of Longing in Phantastes, by Kelly Lehtonen

Phantastes: Enchanting Beauty and Sacrificial Love, by Seth Myers

Crossing a Great Frontier: Essays on George MacDonald's Phantastes
edited by John Pennington

“The Circle of the Imagination: George MacDonald’s Phantastes and Lilith, by Colin Manlove

George MacDonald's Phantastes: Spiral Journey to the Goddess, by Bonnie Gaarden

“The Multiple Realms of George MacDonald’s Phantastes, by Adrian Gunther

“Music in Phantastes and Lilith by George MacDonald: The Phenomenon of Intermediality”, by A. I. Samsonova

“The Art of Manliness: Ekphrasis and/as Masculinity in George MacDonald’s Phantastes, by Albert D. Pionke

“In Search of Spiritual Maturity: George MacDonald’s Phantastes, by Susan E. Howard

“George MacDonald’s Phantastes: Spiral Journey to the Goddess”, by Bonnie Gaarden

“‘Within and Without’: Exploring the Mind in the Novels of George MacDonald”, by Saskia Voorendt

“‘Felicitous Space’ in the Fantasies of George MacDonald and Mervyn Peake”, by Anita Moss

NORTH WIND ARCHIVE

The home page of the North Wind Archive can be accessed here.

“Did William Morris Start MacDonald Writing Fantasy”, by Colin Manlove

“Dryad Fancies and Fairy Imaginations in Phantastes, by John Docherty

“George MacDonald and the Anthropology of Love”, by Robin Phillips

“George MacDonald as a Mythopoeist”, by Joyce R. Hines

“Gustav Holst and George MacDonald”, by R.B. Shaberman

“Mirrors in MacDonald’s Phantastes: A Reflexive Structure”, by Fernando Soto

“Riddled with Evil: Fantasy as Theodicy in George MacDonald’s Phantastes and Lilith, by Courtney Salvey

“The Ideal and the Shadow: George MacDonald’s Phantastes, by Chris Brawley

“The Shadow of Anodos: Alchemical Symbolism in Phantastes, by Aren Roukema

“The Sources of Phantastes, by John Docherty

“The Structure of George MacDonald’s Phantastes, by Adrian Gunther

“Connecting Dimensions: Direction, Location, and Form in the Fantasies of George MacDonald", by Daniel Creed

“The Fourfold Myth of Death and Rebirth in George MacDonald’s Phantastes", by James T. Williamson

REVIEWS

Phantastes by George MacDonald”, by Suzannah Rowntree

“Review of Phantastes by George MacDonald”, by Andrea Lundgren

“The Sweet and Mystical Beauty of George MacDonald’s Phantastes, by Matthew Lee Anderson

Phantastes by George MacDonald”, by Nyki Blatchley

“A Review of George MacDonald’s Phantastes: A Faerie Romance for Men and Women, by Brian Murphy

“Opening Doors to Fairyland: George MacDonald’s Phantastes, by Mari Ness

“George Macdonald: Phantastes, by M.H. Parkinson

Review by Rachel Bomberger of Eerdman’s

SUMMARIES AND STUDY GUIDES

Phantastes, Book-Lover

WINGFOLD

Wingfold is a quarterly magazine that restores material by and about George MacDonald, in print since 1993. To subscribe, click here. To request any of the following articles that appear in back issues of Wingfold, contact Barbara Amell at b_amell@q.com.

Summer 1996

Phantastes Poster in a Fantastic Place”, by Mary Taylor

Fall 2001 (Full issue on Phantastes)

1858 Review

1859 Review

1872 Reviews

“Introduction to Phantastes”, by Greville MacDonald

“On Phantastes”, by Barbara Amell

Illustrations & Title Designs, by John Bell & Arthur Hughes

Spring 2009

“George MacDonald” Pt. 2