It’s Fantasy With Friends‘ weekly discussion time (prompts hosted at Pages Unbound), and this week’s prompt is about high vs low fantasy:
Do you prefer low or high fantasy? Or both?
For those who aren’t super into the genre (since I know I have a few of you around here), the archetypical “high fantasy” would be J.R.R. Tolkien’s The Lord of the Rings. It’s usually set entirely in an alternate world (though I would argue that Guy Gavriel Kay’s The Summer Tree remains pretty high fantasy despite also being a portal fantasy), and involves the typical fantasy trappings — swords and sorcery, elves, dwarves, etc. Low fantasy would cover stuff set in our own world and which feels less immediately epic in scope, like urban fantasy (though series like Ilona Andrews’ Kate Daniels books are ultimately pretty epic in scope despite the apparent “real-world” setting, it takes a while to realise just how big the scope is).
I’m honestly not sure how useful the high/low distinction is for my purposes; I guess if you draw a firm line that you only want to read secondary world fantasy (like The Lord of the Rings) then it might be alright, but even then I think it’s a poor guide to many important aspects of a book. High fantasy just covers so much. In part, I think it’s a high-level label that we’ve pretty much outgrown as a genre, with more and more subgenres to explore and narrow down what you’re interested in: consider cosy fantasy, for instance. It’s often set in wholly different worlds, like Travis Baldree’s Legends & Lattes — but the concerns are everyday, not epic, and I don’t think someone who only wants books like The Lord of the Rings would be very happy if they picked it up because it’s “high fantasy”.
And then there’s stuff like Freya Marske’s Swordcrossed, which I mentioned last week too: it’s set in a fantasy world, but there’s no magic, and the stakes are small and personal. Again, it doesn’t seem like what people are going to be looking for when they want “high fantasy”, but it also doesn’t really meet the definitions of low fantasy. There have always been exceptions… but there are labels now that explain them well, and give you a better idea of a book’s contents.
I am generally the sort of person who likes things to be more of a continuum than a set of tightly defined boxes, so it’s probably no surprise that I love both high and low fantasy, and many books that fall somewhere between. It’s not the kind of criteria I use when deciding what to read overall, though sometimes I might be more in the mood for one than the other (e.g. hankering for something with good world-building).

























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