Time for another Fantasy with Friends discussion post! As ever, the prompts are hosted at Pages Unbound, and this week’s is about what got you interested in the genre:
Is there a particular fantasy that got you interested in the genre? Do you remember any of the earliest fantasy books you read?
Given that my mother’s a fantasy reader as well, I think fantasy stories were just stories to me, rather than thinking in terms of genre. Lots of the books I had as a kid were fantastical in some way, some more so than others; I read a lot of Enid Blyton’s work, for instance, where the Famous Five books are not fantasy, but she also wrote The Magic Faraway Tree. I know I had a box set of the Narnia books, too, with cover art that I personally prefer to all the others I’ve seen, but which hasn’t been reused (alas).
That said, I know that after I read The Hobbit, I pestered Mum for more like it, by which I think I meant fantasy (and she certainly took it to be so). She didn’t let me read The Lord of the Rings until I was a bit older, to make sure I would understand and properly appreciate it, but I have vivid memories of many of the fantasy books she lent me from her shelves. Raymond E. Feist’s Magician was definitely a major early player, along with David Eddings’ work. There’s a lot of nostalgia there, though I doubt I’d revisit David Eddings’ work now, being aware of his extensive child abuse directed at his adopted children. I can’t remember quite when I got A Wizard of Earthsea for Christmas, but probably somewhere around 10-11 years old.
I can’t quite picture where I started seeking out and choosing fantasy books of my own, either — probably in a small way I was doing that all along, but often following Mum’s suggestions and recommendations to help me choose. I know that by the time I was in my mid-teens, Mum and I were both reading Robin Hobb’s Farseer books, and visiting the Waterstones in town for their SF/F section (and to attend a reading and Q&A session by Robin Hobb). At the same time I was reading Neil Gaiman for myself for sure (sadly he’s also tainted his own legacy), Tad Williams, Sarah Zettel…
I can definitely remember when it started becoming more the other way round, too, which was probably most marked from when I was 18 or so: I’d discover the authors and get Mum interested, in my turn. I borrowed Scott Lynch’s The Lies of Locke Lamora from the library when I was at university, and persuaded her to read it. (No, I still haven’t read Republic of Thieves, though. Someday. If people don’t nag me.)
Overall, definitely heavily influenced by Mum’s taste in books, especially until I went off to university and spent more time browsing in bookshops on my own, exploring via library books and second-hand sales, etc.


I love this story! My mom read romance, and she did influence me eventually, but I discovered fantasy on my own, probably at the library. I do remember picking out books and a librarian telling me I was too young to read them. That stuck out and I never forgot it.
I think I really didn’t think of fantasy as a separate genre for a looong time because it was just normal to me, growing up with so many fantasy books around! I also experienced a librarian claiming I was too young; my mother just borrowed those books for me. I remember her doing that with Isaac Asimov’s books, and I loved one of them so much I had trouble letting her return it…
That’s so fun you and your mom shared reading recommendations! My parents don’t read at all, so I mostly got books by wandering vaguely around the library waiting for something to pop out at me!
Briana @ Pages Unbound recently posted…What Fantasy Books Got You Interested in the Genre? (Fantasy with Friends)
I was lucky, I guess! Oddly enough I’ve got more like my dad over time, reading more non-fiction. We don’t share taste in books/topics very closely, though, other than both of us being curious about all kinds of topics that don’t overtly relate to our day-to-day lives, it’s more that I’ve inherited his general ability to be interested in anything.
I love this as I can really relate to it. My mum was really into crime fiction and I’ve inherited that from her. However my daughter has picked up my love of fantasy and a lot of our phone calls are spent discussing our latest fantasy reads.
My interest in classic crime was definitely nurtured by my mum too — we share a love of Dorothy L. Sayers’ work!