kw: book reviews, fiction, fantasy, xanth series, puns
My son brought home a couple of Piers Anthony's books in the Xanth series recently. When he was done with them, I zipped through them: Geis of the Gargoyle and Zombie Lover.
To those not familiar with Mr. Anthony's Xanth books: each is a ride on a punnicular railway through a magical version of Florida, his home state. They are unlike anyone else's work, so I'll leave it to you to discover. I sometimes wonder why the author picked Xanth for his land's name. It means both "yellow" and "other"; probably the latter...and I guess he just likes the sound of it.
Each story is a multiple quest, typically in chiastic order. To be boringly dry, a chiasma is an anti-parallel structure, in which problems are posed in order—and typically each new main character introduced comes with one of the problems attached—then solved in reverse order. Those that are not chiastic tend to be parallel (solved in the order presented).
The quest by itself may be no great shakes; the narrative twists in the punny landscape will have you digging for the other meaning of something in almost every sentence.
A thread running through all the Xanth series is the Adult Conspiracy, which lets the author use all kinds of double entendres and allusions to sexual activity, thus avoiding explicit language, because of the grownup characters' requirement of keeping such things from children. The term "summoning the stork" is Anthony's cute euphemism for sex. The attitude is a slightly exaggerated version of 1950s-schoolyard taboos, where boys freak out if they see any girl's "undies".
Another thread is that new arrivals to Xanth from Mundania (Georgia, I guess) are not magical, but their offspring born in Xanth are. The implications for child rearing can get interesting.
Great narrative skills, on a very light level, so that hardly any mythical creature seems truly threatening. Great escape lit.
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