Every time I start a story by Seanan McGuire I know there are good chances that she will be able to rip my heart to pieces: her shorter works seem to concentrate and distill the feelings she wants to convey into a more powerful, more effective mix, and “Crystal Holloway” is no exception.
CRYSTAL HOLLOWAY AND THE FORGOTTEN PASSAGE
(click on the link to read the story online)
It’s a story about finding secret passages to other worlds, or dimensions, something McGuire has explored more deeply in her recent “Wayward Children” series, but here the place where the protagonist Crystal finds herself is less dark, more conventionally magical: at some point the character mentions C.S. Lewis’ world of Narnia, and the comparison holds, since the land of Otherways is more like a fairyland than a dark mirror of our own primary world.
There are dangers here, granted, and young Crystal has become a sort of super-hero for the land, battling evil creatures like the dire bats we see in the opening of the story, and fighting side by side with humanoid rabbit Chester and the arachnoid Naamen. She’s been able to move back and forth between worlds, but now that she is reaching her sixteenth year she feels the pull of this magical place, “a strange, beautiful, terrible world, with its talking spiders and its deadly, scheming roses” and she’s considering whether to stay permanently or return to her old life. That is, until something happens that changes things – and Crystal – forever…
This story delves into the old dilemma between reality and fiction, between the need to believe in magic and the pressures from everyday responsibilities, and it resonates deeply with people, like me, who love being taken elsewhere by the skilled words of a storyteller. How many times we, lovers of speculative fiction, have been told that we “need to stick to reality”? How many times our reading choices have been branded as childish and silly?
That’s what this short story wants to show, that no one should have to make that choice, that we should be able to move freely between worlds – the imagined and the real – with the same ease as when we move from one room to another. That there is no stigma attached to the need for dreams.
Sadly, there seem always to be some Truth Fairies, ready to warn us that “You can’t be part of two worlds forever. The heart doesn’t work like that. There isn’t room, any more than there’s room in a mouth for two sets of teeth. Baby teeth fall out. Childhoods end. That’s how adult teeth, and adult lives, find the space to grow.”
And Truth Fairies can be cruel indeed….
My Rating:
Test comment!!!
😉
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That mention of Narnia had to be a deliberate nod to Lewis – I was thinking of it too as I was reading the story’s description. The title brings to mind of those classic fantasy children adventures too!
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Yes, and like most classic children stories there is a dark side to it – after all, this is McGuire we’re talking about! 😉
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I love the sound of this and even though I don’t read a lot of short stories this one definitely has me intrigued. Thanks for the link 😀
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You’re very welcome! And you know I can’t resist doing some PR for one of my favorite authors 😉
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I love the Wayward Children vibe of this story. I will definitely book mark it to read later, I just can’t get enough of McGuire these days! Thanks for sharing:-)
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Eh eh… we both need a McGuire fix on a regular basis, don’t we? 😀
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