48 pages • 1 hour read
Adrienne YoungA modern alternative to SparkNotes and CliffsNotes, SuperSummary offers high-quality Study Guides with detailed chapter summaries and analysis of major themes, characters, and more.
Spells for Forgetting is a work of low fantasy and has several elements in common with the magical realism genre. In literary terms, low fantasy refers to any story with magical elements that is set in the ordinary world we know (rather than a secondary fictional world, like J. R. R. Tolkien’s Middle Earth). Magical realism takes this a step further and presents those magical elements as an accepted, integrated part of the everyday. In other words, magic is “normal” for the people who populate the story. Spells for Forgetting presents spell craft and magic as an ordinary part of the main characters’ upbringing, yet it remains unconventional and supernatural to those outside the community. This means that although Spells for Forgetting has been marketed as a magical realism novel and has elements in common with the genre, it isn’t quite magical realism in the most traditional sense of the term.
Spells for Forgetting was Adrienne’s Young’s adult debut, following a series of young adult novels and preceding The Unmaking of June Farrow. Young’s YA novels are more overtly fantastical and take place in a secondary world, while her adult novels are more rooted in reality. High fantasy exists as an escapist genre that pulls readers into a world of magical beings; low fantasy does the opposite, instead bringing a magical world to the reader. Spells for Forgetting accomplishes this by creating an extraordinary world immediately recognizable as one that exists within our own.
Although Saoirse Island is a fictional place, it draws from the real-world setting of the Pacific Northwest—a term that refers to the upper west corner of the United States and the lower west corner of Canada, from Oregon to British Columbia. It’s sometimes called the Cascadia Region, and it has a notably distinctive ecosystem and culture. The Pacific Northwest is characterized by its old-growth forests, proximity to the sea, and wide-open spaces yet uncolonized by humanity. There are dozens of small, populated islands bordering the coast, most of which are accessible from the mainland by regular ferry services, and it’s this area in which Saoirse Island would naturally exist.
Because the Pacific Northwest is such a unique and magical region, many fantasy writers have chosen it as a setting for their work. In addition to Spells for Forgetting, some of the fantasy novels that take place in this part of the world include Wild Is the Witch by Rachel Griffin, Wizard of the Pigeons by Megan Lindholm, Armageddon’s Children by Terry Brooks, Wild Life by Molly Gloss, and Winterwood by Shea Ernshaw. As an area that was industrialized relatively late in human history, it retains much of its former wildness. This makes it an ideal place to bring elements of traditional high fantasy (such as The Lord of the Rings) into everyday life.
By Adrienne Young
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