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The Phoenix Tree: An Anthology of Myth Fantasy

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Contents include: The Banished King by Frank R. Stockton; Ixion in Heaven by Benjamin Disrali; The Moon-Slave by Barry Pain; The Rose and the Cup by Kenneth Morris; The Mistress of Kaer-Mor by Evangeline Walton; The Twilight of the Gods by Richard Garnett; The Shield-Maiden by Algernon Blackwood; Witches' Hollow by H.P. Lovecraft & August Derleth; The Goose Girl by Eric Linklater; Nina Sol by Felix Marti-Ibanez; The Bride of the Man-Horse by Lord Dunsany; The Circular Ruins by Jorge Luis Borges; The Story of El-ahrairah and the Black Rabbit of Inle by Richard Adams; The Threads by Vera Chapmen; Night Rider on a Pale Horse by Galed Elftandsson.

279 pages, Mass Market Paperback

First published September 1, 1980

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About the author

Robert H. Boyer

10 books23 followers
Bob Boyer, A Mercifully Brief Introduction:

I have recently completed work on the second and enhanced edition of THE MAGIC NECKLACE OF AL-ANDALUS. It will be out in 2021. The following biography highlights my personal and professional background from which this novel and my earlier work spring.

Reading, writing, traveling, and teaching Have always attracted me. Being a teacher has enabled me to combine all four activities, with my first love being teaching. When I was a freshman at La Salle High School in my hometown of Philadelphia, I decided that I would be a teacher. I have never looked back.

I retired in 2005, after forty-four years of teaching: four years in high school, three years as a graduate teaching assistant, and the last thirty-six years teaching English at St. Norbert College in Northeastern Wisconsin. I still enjoy teaching occasionally, most recently in the Learning for Life Program at the University of Wisconsin Green Bay. I remain connected with St. Norbert College in De Pere, Wisconsin.

Teaching has afforded me opportunities for travel, often with my family. I have taught in Canton, Ohio, in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, in Phoenix, Arizona, in Philadelphia, and in Northeastern, Wisconsin. I was fortunate to earn a fellowship to study at Oxford University in England, with my wife and four children along. Later on, courses that I taught, or research that I did, took me to Nicaragua (during their civil war), to El Salvador (just after their civil war), twice to Spain, and six times to the Philippines. I spent two sabbatical semesters in Spain (my thanks to St. Norbert College), and I was a Visiting Professor in Manila, the Philippines, for a memorable semester. A friend referred to me as “an adventurer.”

The teaching and travel have resulted in a number of books. Prior to THE MAGIC NECKLACE OF AL-ANDALUS, my most recent book was SUNDAYS IN MANILA, a travel memoir based on my experiences in the Philippines. That country and the many friends and acquaintances I have made there keeps drawing me back. I also write a monthly column for “VIA TIMES Newsmagazine,” a Philippine-American publication out of Chicago. You can find me, including a recent picture, on their web site (www.viatimes.com). All of my earlier books are edited collections of Fantasy Literature or are about Fantasy Literature and some of the people who write it. You can find many of these books listed in my Goodreads Author Profile.

THE MAGIC NECKLACE OF AL-ANDALUS is my first original work of fiction. It is a Historical Fantasy Novel set primarily in medieval Spain during the height of the Arab Ascendancy there from the 10th through the 12th Centuries. The story has been percolating in my mind and imagination ever since I was a graduate student at the University of Pennsylvania and studied Medieval European Literature, which then covered mainly British literature and its Italian and French influences.

I continued to enjoy and later to teach medieval literature but with a growing sense of uneasiness with its antisemitism and bitter crusades against Islam. The antisemitism was more disturbing to me than the conflict with Islam; Islam was a foe, sometimes even cast as a noble foe in a war in which its heroes could occasionally be victorious. Once, in a moment of perhaps guilty frustration about these matters, I visited a medieval history friend and colleague and asked him, "was there ever a time when Jews, Muslims, and Christians actually got along together?" His answer: "Yes, medieval Spain during the Arab Ascendancy. You should go there." I did, and THE MAGIC NECKLACE OF AL-ANDALUS is the result.

Finally I owe whatever success I have achieved as teacher and writer to my family, especially my wife of 56 years, who has been my best audience, inspiration, and critic.

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Displaying 1 - 4 of 4 reviews
Profile Image for Sarah Morgan Sandquist.
175 reviews17 followers
March 8, 2023
There were so many phenomenal works in this anthology. A few have become instant favorites. The featured authors are so talented; some are well-known but other I had never heard if and their works are otherwise somewhat hard to find. I think the editors were spot-on in their choices and look forward to reading more of their collected works.
Profile Image for Zeta Syanthis.
314 reviews14 followers
January 8, 2014
I liked it, but it took me a while to finish for some reason. Some stories were amazing, others were a bit dry as they tried to stay a bit too close to their mythological or historical roots. It's a good read, but I'd say you'd have to be really interested in these kinds of stories for me to recommend it to you.
306 reviews
December 25, 2016
This seemed dated. I kept it too long before reading it. Like decades. And it's difficult in the space of a short story to get emotionally involved. The best story was by Richard Adams from "Watership Down". I haven't ever read that, and now I'm thinking I would like it.
Displaying 1 - 4 of 4 reviews

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