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Newford #3

The Ivory and the Horn

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Among Charles de Lint's most beloved creations is the northern city of Newford, a place touched by deep magic--and the setting for novels like The Onion Girl and story collections like Dreams Underfoot. Now, with the Orb publication of The Ivory and the Horn, all four of the Newford story collections are returned to print. Here, on the streets of Newford, is the magic that hovers at the edge of everyday life.

320 pages, Paperback

First published April 1, 1995

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About the author

Charles de Lint

446 books3,997 followers
Charles de Lint is the much beloved author of more than seventy adult, young adult, and children's books. Renowned as one of the trailblazers of the modern fantasy genre, he is the recipient of the World Fantasy, Aurora, Sunburst, and White Pine awards, among others. Modern Library's Top 100 Books of the 20th Century poll, conducted by Random House and voted on by readers, put eight of de Lint's books among the top 100.
De Lint is a poet, folklorist, artist, songwriter and performer. He has written critical essays, music reviews, opinion columns and entries to encyclopedias, and he's been the main book reviewer for The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction since 1987. De Lint served as Writer-in-residence for two public libraries in Ottawa and has taught creative writing workshops for adults and children in Canada and the United States. He's been a judge for several prominent awards, including the Nebula, World Fantasy, Theodore Sturgeon and Bram Stoker.

Born in the Netherlands in 1951, de Lint immigrated to Canada with his family as an infant. The family moved often during de Lint's childhood because of his father's job with an international surveying company, but by the time Charles was twelve—having lived in Western Canada, Turkey and Lebanon—they had settled in Lucerne, Quebec, not far from where he now resides in Ottawa, Ontario.

In 1980, de Lint married the love of his life, MaryAnn Harris, who works closely with him as his first editor, business manager and creative partner. They share their love and home with a cheery little dog named Johnny Cash.

Charles de Lint is best described as a romantic: a believer in compassion, hope and human potential. His skilled portrayal of character and settings has earned him a loyal readership and glowing praise from peers, reviewers and readers.

Charles de Lint writes like a magician. He draws out the strange inside our own world, weaving stories that feel more real than we are when we read them. He is, simply put, the best.
—Holly Black (bestselling author)
Charles de Lint is the modern master of urban fantasy. Folktale, myth, fairy tale, dreams, urban legend—all of it adds up to pure magic in de Lint's vivid, original world. No one does it better.
—Alice Hoffman (bestselling author)

To read de Lint is to fall under the spell of a master storyteller, to be reminded of the greatness of life, of the beauty and majesty lurking in shadows and empty doorways.
—Quill & Quire

His Newford books, which make up most of de Lint's body of work between 1993 and 2009, confirmed his reputation for bringing a vivid setting and repertory cast of characters to life on the page. Though not a consecutive series, the twenty-five standalone books set in (or connected to) Newford give readers a feeling of visiting a favourite city and seeing old friends.
More recently, his young adult Wildlings trilogy—Under My Skin, Over My Head, and Out of This World—came out from Penguin Canada and Triskell Press in 2012, 2013 and 2014. Under My Skin won 2013 Aurora Award. A novel for middle-grade readers, The Cats of Tanglewood Forest, published by Little Brown in 2013, won the Sunburst Award, earned starred reviews in both Publishers Weekly and Quill & Quire, and was chosen by the New York Times Editors as one of the top six children's books for 2013. His most recent adult novel, The Mystery of Grace (2009), is a fascinating ghost story about love, passion and faith. It was a finalist for both the Sunburst and Evergreen awards.

De Lint is presently writing a new adult novel. His storytelling skills also shine in his original songs. He and MaryAnn (also a musician) recently released companion CDs of their original songs, samples of which can be heard on de Lin

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5 stars
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Displaying 1 - 30 of 107 reviews
Profile Image for Mikela.
98 reviews54 followers
June 16, 2013
I was first introduced to deLint's world of urban fantasy with his book, Dingo, and it was love at first word. He has the ability to look beyond the day to day struggles and show the magic of the world around us, a dream world where all is possible and the inhabitants take on a life of their own, blending mythology, the spirit world, fantasy and reality together and inviting his readers to join him.

I must confess though that I truly lack an appreciation of short stories. I've always preferred a full length novel that has the time to develop the characters as well as building a well executed plot line, things not available in short stories. That being said, I also have so great an appreciation for the tales told by Charles deLint that I thought I'd give it a shot. In true deLint style he presented 15 short stories that introduced us to fairies, wood spirits, desert spirits and other magical beings we've seen in folklore from around the world. Each story was well crafted, some of which I loved, others less so, but when taken as a whole seemed to lack a cohesive flow leaving the tales to blend together in what I felt was a bit muddled fashion.

Not being a veteran short story reader I fear that I approached and read the book in the wrong way. I read it as though it was a regular length novel without leaving enough time between stories, time to digest what I had read and to savor each tale on its own merits. I wish I had used a different method and read one short story per night so that I could have appreciated the book more, the way it deserved. I started out loving it but for the reasons given lost much of my enthusiasm. Still, deLint remains one of my favourite authors and I'm eagerly anticipating reading some of his other works that rest on my nightstand.

Rating: 3.5
Originally published on www.chapterofdreams.com
Profile Image for Rachel.
978 reviews63 followers
November 19, 2008
Another collection of Newford short stories, and they are as powerful as ever. More of the backstory on some characters we know and like, and the introduction of all sorts of characters we haven't met before, and may never again. De Lint recently announced that he's done with Newford -- I can only hope he changes his mind! These are wonderful stories, and very inspiring.
Profile Image for Craig.
6,393 reviews179 followers
May 12, 2025
This is the second collection of de Lint's short fiction set in his fictional northern town of Newford, following Dreams Underfoot, though it's not necessary to read them in sequence. The stories all (except for one original to this book) first appeared 1992-'94, a remarkably short span for such richly detailed, highly polished stories with such varied themes. I didn't enjoy it quite as much as the first book, possibly because it seems to have a somewhat darker and less hopeful tone, with more instances of abuse and neglect, and partially because I thought it wandered away from the Newford mythology that was previously established into other areas (the Southwest stories) that were harder to incorporate into the whole. It's still a terrific group of tales that feel just as fresh now as they did thirty years ago if you ignore the absence of smartphones. It's hard to pick favorites, but The Wishing Well and Mr. Truepenny's Book Emporium and Gallery stand out the most right now.
Profile Image for Maggie K.
486 reviews135 followers
January 29, 2018
Another Newford short story collection....this is my third travel to Newford, and I had a great time!

I always seem to find it hard to think of how to describe deLint. The writing is excellent, and conjures a strong sense of place. After a bit, you feel like you would know how to navigate Newford should you ever land there in a timeslip or in a dream. But there are a few other quirks that make it a bit annoying as well. Almost all the central character women in Newford are thin, waiflike creatures with curly hair and a horrific past that lends them the wisdom and sensitivity to deal with the magic that imbibes Newford. Almost everyone is sometype of artist or musician or writer. They all make it very clear how very opposed to child abuse they are. Now, I am glad theyre against child abuse, but sometimes it seems the stories are beating the reader over the head to make sure we know that.

I saw some familiar faces; Jilly, her friends Sophie and Wendy, Geordie the Fiddler, Angel of Grasso, Maisie and her little family...and a few new people; Chris the social worker, and Jaimie the vigilante seem like they will stick around.
The theme that ran through these stories seemed to be about dreams, and how much a part of reality they can be. But in de Lint's hands, that statement becomes a magical thing itself.

Sometimes, the magical realism of Newford is the perfect escapism
Profile Image for Shaitarn.
607 reviews50 followers
March 28, 2022
5 stars.

Charles de Lint is, without doubt, my favourite urban fantasy author. Whether his writing would even be considered urban fantasy by most is possibly debatable. There are no vampires, no weres and no love triangles - instead, he writes about the fey and the magic of lost, forgotten places as well as dreams and the power of creativity, in art and music.

This anthology of fifteen short stories is set in his fictional town of Newford and features some of his familiar characters such as Geordie the fiddler and artist Jilly Coppercorn, but doesn't require any knowledge of his previous works.

I enjoyed it, but I was already a fan of de Lint's writing; his prose is smooth, and carries the reader along effortlessly as well as making the impossibilities he writes about sound natural and realistic. Although his stories are clad in the trappings of urban fantasy, he can sometimes deal with heavier topics such as child abuse and suicide, so if you are sensitive about such things, you should perhaps think twice about reading these tales.

With that caveat, I recommend de Lint's works wholeheartedly. Either one of his anthologies (this one or Dreams Underfoot) or Trader or Memory and Dream would be a good place to start.
Profile Image for Daniel B-G.
547 reviews5 followers
May 20, 2019
I enjoy de Lint's writing to an extent, though as with all fiction, I am not as sold on the short form stuff. The quality tends to be variable, the writing less polished, the stories often a bit stunted. There are some gems in the collection, but a lot of quite pedestrian stuff too. Some problems specifically with de Lint.
Too much child abuse - this is clearly a big issue for de Lint, but more than 50% of his characters appear to have suffered abuse in childhood. This is an important issue, but the effect is blunted when overused. Also, it pushes the situation that little bit closer to melodrama.
Always bloody artists - by the end of both this and dreams underfoot, I was ready to cut all artists and musicians out of my life. Enough already. Even the journalists were only journalists because they sold out. You don't have to be an artist to be a good person Charles.
Subtlety - It's kinda ironic, throughout the stories there's an awful lot of reference to understatement, allegory and artistry. The irony being that it kinda comes across like someone saying "you know what? I'm the best at understatement. That's me, the best". Now, these sorts of comments work in other authors when done as a self referential post modern meta fictional commentary, but they aren't, or at the very least they are too vanilla and uninteresting to count as that, a bit basic, but it's too obvious to just drop into the background as a bit of flavour.

Still, there are some great little stories in here, and I don't regret reading it, if only because it pads out the flavour of the wider world. I'm looking forward though to getting my teeth into the next long form story though as it promises so much more.
Profile Image for Matt Deblass.
34 reviews4 followers
April 29, 2019
I'm re-reading de Lint's Newford collections after many years, and just picked up a used copy of this one. The sense of wonder, the seamless blending of multiple mythologies and the touching and occasional brutal emotional world of the stories is just as I recalled. The thing that I didn't fully get when I last read them, more than a decade ago, was how de Lint's ideas of consensual reality - that the world we experience is as we see it because most of us agree it is - applies not only to the magical beings that live in his stories, but to the all-too-real street people, mentally ill, and abuse victims whom he often describes. I sort-of realized it when I read these stories previously, but for some reason this time through it really hit home how there ARE other worlds, right in front of our faces, and we all agree not to see them.
In this collection, as with others by him, there are no bad stories, but the ones that pack the greatest emotional impact for me are the ones where the supernatural elements are understated. The stories chronicle the realistic emotional journeys of everyday people, but then a bit of magic touches them in some small form that makes their story resonate in a whole new way (for example, after all this time, I can't get through "Pal o' Mine" without tearing up, and it's such a little thing that could have been imagined... just read it for yourself).
De Lint is a favorite of mine, for good reason.
Profile Image for Robert.
251 reviews16 followers
July 24, 2022
Most of these stories are home runs. The magic is illuminating and poignant, and makes you realize that there is magic in one’s own life, as well.
Profile Image for Redsteve.
1,377 reviews21 followers
April 1, 2019
Ivory and Horn is the second collection of short stories in de Lint’s Newford books. While some of them (especially the first three) still feel a bit basic, I feel like he’s finding the series’ voice and the city of Newford is starting to seem like a real place. Most of these tales are (for lack of a better term) “urban fantasy light”, where the ghosts, spirits and faerie creatures might or might not be “real” – often occurring in dreams or in situations where the protagonist’s perceptions are in question. Many of the characters here appear in the previous short story collection, Dreams Underfoot, or in the novel Memory and Dream. He also introduces more Native American characters, including Coyote (in “Where Desert Sprits Crowd the Night” and “Coyote Stories”), who I remember liking in later books. One thing that I have been noticing in the Newford books this time around is the number of characters who were abused as children (I remember there were some, but it now seems like this is a common theme in a lot of these stories), which made me think of Andrew Vacchs (the “Burke” novels, "Born Bad", "Shella", etc.) but with more redemption and less vengeance (and, of course, fantasy elements), but it appears that de Lint actually knows him, and mentions Vacchs in the story “Dead Man’s Shoes” not as an author but in his capacity as a juvenile justice attorney. “Dead Man’s Shoes” and the following story “Bird Bones and Wood Ash” definitely have more retributive feel than many of de Lint’s other stories. Overall a solid 3 stars.
Profile Image for Wing Kee.
2,091 reviews37 followers
October 21, 2017
So good!

World: The world building is amazing, the world that De Lint creates is fully formed, familiar yet magical. It' the feeling you get when you read really good Neil Gaiman. De Lint's world is about the spaces and cracks in the pavement, the people we turn and don't at in our society and it's there where all the magic and wonder is and it's a wonderful world indeed. The tone is simply amazing and the characters...just read it.

Story: There are a lot of stories in this collection and each of them feels different but also weaves together in a beautiful tapestry that is Newford. Highlights for me are Waifs and Strays, Mr. Truepenny, The Forest is Crying and Dream Harder Dream True. They are all wonderfully paced and so full of melancholy and wonder that...I can't explain it. I just love De Lint's books I feel transported.

Characters: Jilly is in it!!! A cast of real and flawed characters that makes for wonderful stories and drama. Great dialog, small silences, beautiful inner landscapes. Perfect.

I am biased so just read it.

Onward to the next book!
Profile Image for James Morpurgo.
433 reviews28 followers
May 7, 2024
Another short story collection set in the urban fantasy setting of Newford.

This is my third experience of De Lint's interconnected shared universe and I'm starting to become deeply attached to the town and its eccentric and artsy inhabitants. Magic and wonder exists everywhere when you remember how to see it!

These Newford books are great for a change in reading mood and I think can be read in any order as stand alone entries but I will most likely continue in publication order. Looking forward to spending more time here in the future...
Profile Image for Amanda.
58 reviews
February 19, 2021
I just don’t like short stories that much, and I never knew which character was narrating the story until halfway through, so it was hard to empathize. The writing is beautiful and haunting, but I wasn’t drawn into the stories.
Profile Image for George K..
2,762 reviews375 followers
March 13, 2015
Από τα τρία βιβλία του Τσαρλς Ντε Λιντ που έχουν μεταφραστεί στα ελληνικά, στην βιβλιοθήκη μου ανήκει μόνο η συλλογή διηγημάτων Οι πύλες των ονείρων, που μόλις τελείωσα. Δεν είναι καν στα δέκα πιο πολυδιαβασμένα έργα του και κατά κάποιο τρόπο είναι το έκτο βιβλίο της γνωστής σειράς Newford, η οποία αποτελείται από 23 βιβλία μέχρι στιγμής, δεν καταλαβαίνω λοιπόν γιατί επιλέχτηκε αυτό το έργο προς μετάφραση. Καλώς μεταφράστηκε βέβαια, γιατί οι περισσότερες ιστορίες μου άρεσαν και γενικά πέρασα καλά, απλώς αναρωτιέμαι.

Δεκαπέντε ιστορίες συγκροτούν την συλλογή αυτή, κάποιες λίγες είναι γύρω στις δεκαπέντε σελίδες, κάποιες άλλες αρκετά παραπάνω, μια μάλιστα είναι κοντά στις εκατό σελίδες. Πρόκειται ξεκάθαρα για συλλογή ιστοριών αστικής φαντασίας, με το στοιχείο του fantasy σε αρκετές περιπτώσεις να είναι ιδιαίτερα δευτερεύον ή ακόμα και δυσδιάκριτο. Δηλαδή ένας σκληροπυρηνικός φαντασάκιας πιθανότατα δεν θα καλοπεράσει, αν περιμένει μαγεία, ξωτικά και δεν ξέρω εγώ τι άλλο. Οι ιστορίες επικεντρώνονται περισσότερο στους ανθρώπους και το περιβάλλον τους, παρά στο fantasy κομμάτι. Πάντως φαντασία υπάρχει, δεν το συζητάμε. Και πνεύματα και περίεργα όνειρα και ίσως ακόμα και φανταστικοί κόσμοι παράλληλοι με την σκληρή πραγματικότητα της πόλης Νιούφορντ.

Κάποιοι από τους χαρακτήρες συμμετείχαν σε περισσότερες από μια ιστορίες και απ'όσο έχω καταλάβει έχουν συμμετοχή και σε άλλα βιβλία της σειράς, είτε αυτά είναι μυθιστορήματα είτε συλλογές διηγημάτων. Και, βέβαια, τα σκηνικά είναι παρόμοια, μιας και οι ιστορίες της σειράς διαδραματίζονται στο Νιούφορντ και πέριξ αυτού. Κάτι που σημαίνει ότι πιθανότατα θα μου άρεσε περισσότερο το βιβλίο, θα έπιανα περισσότερες αναφορές, αν είχα διαβάσει κάποια από τα προηγούμενα. Και πάλι όμως, όπως είπα προηγουμένως, πέρασα καλά. Οι πέντε ιστορίες που ξεχώρισα είναι αυτές: Άστεγοι και αδέσποτα, Το πηγάδι των ευχών, Τα παπούτσια του νεκρού άντρα, Το δάσος κλαίει και Το εμπορικό κέντρο βιβλίου και η πινακοθήκη του κυρίου Τρούπενι. Τρεις ιστορίες που μου άρεσαν λιγότερο ή με άφησαν κάπως αδιάφορο, είναι αυτές: Το κουτί ζωγραφικής, Η θύελλα στα μάτια της και Η φίλη μου.

Σίγουρα δεν είναι ένα βιβλίο που θα σε ξετρελάνει, γενικά όμως αξίζει να διαβαστεί. Πιστεύω ότι τα άλλα δυο βιβλία που κυκλοφορούν στα ελληνικά θα είναι ανώτερα (ειδικά το Η Καρδιά του Φεγγαριού), το θέμα είναι να τα βρω.
Profile Image for Erin.
153 reviews13 followers
June 29, 2015
Charles de Lint is one of my guilty pleasures - he can be pretty cliched in his descriptions and his characters can get a little preachy. I generally don't mind the preachy tendencies because I tend to agree and there are usually other qualities in his writing that make up for it.

I read this story collection over a number of months when I just needed something quick and different for my nightly reading. By the end of it I was wondering why I read de Lint in the first place. This is a very weak book, and because of that the stories all kind of blended together for me in a non-descript mass. The things that sort of irk me about his writing were only magnified. Many of the stories in this book are also structured in a manner in which there are voices interjected in between the plot and it's not quite clear if it's someone different or if it's an internal monologue by one of the characters already introduced. I don't think this is a bad thing - it can be great for suspense and keeping one involved in the story to puzzle it out - but I found I just wasn't invested enough in the stories to do anything but skim past.

This is most definitely no Dreams Underfoot - his first Newford book and a collection that I can still reminisce about, loving all the haunting, creepy twists and turns he took with each story, successfully keeping me in suspense until the end. I believe this book had a different theme centering on artists, and perhaps that's why the stories feel like they have such a different mood to me. But while Dreams Underfoot presented a many layered world full of all sorts of creepy and odd wonders, this book made Newford seem quite one dimensional and lackluster.

Out of any of them I thought the last story was the best and presented a pretty fascinating, unresolved question to ponder in the end.
Profile Image for Althea Ann.
2,254 reviews1,209 followers
September 28, 2013
A collection of short stories, all set in DeLint's imaginary city of Newford. DeLint is a good writer. I can't deny that a couple of these stories even made me cry. But, overall, their quality is really diminished by being too social-agenda-oriented. Too many of them seem to be written For Disadvantaged Youth; To Have a Positive Influence. It's been a recurring criticism I've had of DeLint's writing - he's good enough to just let his characters Be People, rather than Girl-With-An-Eating-Disorder, Abused-Homeless-Boy, or etc. But he doesn't. I generally agree with DeLint's messages of tolerance, diversity, multi-culturalism, ecology, and especially the importance of artistic ..and the one story about the girl who gets her life together, goes back to school, gets a job - and finds herself with not enough time for things that really matter to her, definitely spoke to me) - but too often pop psychology takes over and the writing begins to feel preachy. And it's no fun to be preached at, even when you agree with the message of the sermon.

Contents:
"Waifs and Strays"
"Mr. Truepenny's Book Emporium and Gallery"
"The Forest Is Crying"
"The Wishing Well"
"Dead Man's Shoes"
"Bird Bones and Wood Ash"
"A Tempest in Her Eyes"
"Saxophone Joe and the Woman in Black"
"The Bone Woman"
"Pal o' Mine"
"Where Desert Spirits Crowd the Night"
"Dream Harder, Dream True"
"The Pochade Box"
"The Forever Trees"
Profile Image for Mitchell Friedman.
5,858 reviews228 followers
May 24, 2022
Re-reading Newford kind of feels like visiting with an old friend. Except I'm not sure if I've read this one more than once before. Mostly because I don't remember the details, at least not of most of the stories. Some of the stories I probably read in other collections. Instead I just remember the interweaving. And of course the hints of stories still to come, which I get to re-read as well. These are some dark stories - death and abuse and illness and murder and suicide. But it's really not the only thing in them. There's always beauty and a certain flavor, a certain poignancy. This one contains the usual players - though some of them remain just off-screen throughout. There's some unevenness. And the longest story feels long. And maybe the power of the stories loses some towards the end.
Profile Image for Isabel (kittiwake).
819 reviews21 followers
December 9, 2011
I was quickly drawn into this book when I found that the first two stories followed on from stories in "Dreams Underfoot", which I read a while ago. There's always something magical just around the corner in Newford, and characters you've met before keep reappearing. I think that if you read too many of Charles de Lint's stories too close together you could find them slightly cloying, and the amount of repetition can be a little annoying, but if you spread them out they are wonderful reads for anyone who wishes that they had a little more magic in their life.
Profile Image for Kirsten.
1,321 reviews6 followers
October 3, 2016
I had this series somewhere on a to-read list, reason for recommendation long forgotten. When this book came into my hands I thought it would be a good chance to check out the writing before I commit to a series. That turned out to be a great idea. The short stories in this book stand alone, but are tied together by some common elements that I think must continue in the series. The language and world-building were interesting. I guess I'll have to bump the rest of the books up my list a bit.
Profile Image for Michelle Morrell.
1,111 reviews112 followers
January 22, 2009
de Lint is always a reliable good read. This novel takes place in his urban fantasy setting of Newford, a huge city where the edges shimmer and the touch of the fae is always in the air. The second of the Newford books, this is a set of short stories that cycles around a handful of characters that pop in and out of each other's tales. It reminded me a lot of the Bordertown novels, though that is a shared universe and Newford is de Lint's alone (so far!). I shall definitely read more.
Profile Image for Cupcakencorset.
657 reviews17 followers
November 9, 2011
This fine collection of short stories is part of de Lint's Newford series. The characters are a mix of familiar and new, with explorations of the mythos of this world. The stories vary widely in length and give the reader glimpses of Newford that will, I hope, be explored in depth in later books in the series.
Profile Image for Rebecca.
601 reviews25 followers
August 27, 2021
If I had to pick one favorite author, it would be Charles de Lint. His books have kept me company and kept me sane through some of my darkest days. I come back to them, and back to them. Although I have been gone from them for a few decades (house fire, library wiped out), I am coming home again, and LOVING IT!
Profile Image for Todd R.
301 reviews21 followers
February 18, 2008
Ivory and the Horn continues DeLint's Newford chronicles.
Short stories filled with mythic characters and cityscapes that are at once modern but remind us of the ancient forgotten wonder of the inner landscape
Profile Image for Aurora Deshauteurs.
69 reviews14 followers
August 15, 2010
The Newford collections seem to have different themes, #6 is a bit heavy on the tragedy but it combines the faerie and urban reality very well. The stories feel very individual and fresh.
6,234 reviews83 followers
November 15, 2010
A collection of short stories where the characters are more concerned with people than money, and can see the magic in the world, how people overcome evil and problems. More literary fantasy.
Profile Image for Squirrel.
435 reviews14 followers
July 1, 2021
Rereading these books, I can see how I fell in love with them a decade and a half ago. The writing is beautiful and heartbreaking. Most of the stories don't even have a clear antagonist, just little bits of growth or change and little bits of contact with entities that aren't quite of the rational world. But there are monsters lurking here, but most of them are human.
But the wheel turns and I've learned but the text stays the same. I can respect that de Lint's focus on the marginalized of the fictional town of Newford long before it was the norm. I can appreciate how he cares about all of his characters. The best stories focus on Jilly Coppercorn and her artistic friends or the stories where he focuses on the act of creation. He also weaves in music and songs in a way that helps ground his stories to real life, despite the fictional/fanciful nature of Newford and its inhabitants. See my playlist of his named/implied songs and artists here: https://open.spotify.com/playlist/73K...
Nearly 30 years since publication is a lot of time under the bridge, though. And de Lint has characters who, frustratingly, can't see the forest for the trees. Why is there so much poverty? Why is there so much abuse, darkness, pain? None of de Lint's characters really know. At least one thinks that things were so much better at some past moment in time. His characters are constantly trying to change little things: a conversation, a bit of money, a struggling small nonprofit. But there are no union members, no activists, no socialists or leftists in de Lint's Newford. Maybe in de Lint's mind those people are not the kind who get blindsided by visits by ghosts, or talking animals, or by the trickster god Coyote. I don't know.
Are these stories suffering porn? There's an undercurrent of paternalism in de Lint's work that doesn't quite square with me in 2021. It's the same kind of undercurrent that I hear in 10,000 Maniacs songs that has made me less of a fan now than when I was a teen. Having read what comes afterwards, I can see the ways that de Lint fails to hit the mark while trying to create a diverse set of characters for his stories. It doesn't seem like he really groks racism. I have complicated feelings about de Lint's use of First Nations people and ideas in his work At least his treatment of a gay character in one story is more subtle and more sympathetic than in his previous works but I think that he similarly doesn't really grok queerness. There's space here for a story about a trans person with all these tales of transformation and feyness. But it's 1993 and de Lint's imagination has blinders on that I'm sure he didn't know were there. As I make my way through his works, I will see which blinders he manages to remove and which ones remain stubbornly in place.
Profile Image for Maja.
459 reviews27 followers
August 23, 2025
Perhaps I should take more breaks in-between the reading of individual stories in collections of short stories, because personally I often feel as though I lack the ability to appreciate them. I’m nearly always left thinking "that’s it?" and being largely unaffected and unimpressed. Then again, there HAVE been short stories I enjoyed a lot, namely by Ken Liu. And so perhaps the problem lies in part on both sides, mine and the stories in question.

Charles de Lint’s Newford collections can be read in whatever order and so this is my first one. I picked it up due to looking in particular for a new gritty urban fantasy book/series that would fill in the hole left behind by wolf among us, fables and dresden files. Alas, it didn’t quite fill those shoes. But it didn’t entirely fail either… maybe.

Firstly, though it may be unfair to the book, I did pick it up with clear expectations and so I couldn’t help but be affected by how closely these expectations would be met. The ratio of realism and fantasy isn’t really what I was hoping for of this book. Majority of the stories I would argue have one minimal fantasy element that seems to be added for flair and some whimsy but doesn’t actually affect the story at all. Meanwhile I had hoped for the fantasy elements to be sort of ever-present. The lack of any overarching storyline was to be expected I guess from a collection like this (which is not at all my style) but was made worse by the fact that most of the stories lacked plot and structure as well. A lot of them simply did not lead anywhere. That’s just not sth I particularly enjoy.

BUT, I will say that there was something I did enjoy in reading these stories. Some of the characters I did find endearing and I did like seeing them pop up in other stories. I would also like to know more about some of them. The general atmosphere and grittiness, especially in earlier stories, were also appreciated. I think seeing as this is book three, I will try at least the first two of the series as well. I want to see how this series exactly works, just how much do the characters reoccur and are is there any cohesion in the stories they appear in? Any character arcs? If the answer is an absolute no, then I will be a bit disappointed ngl. But we shall see I suppose. I just really feel like I need to give more books of this series a chance because forming a solid opinion.
Profile Image for Marion Hill.
Author 8 books80 followers
January 14, 2019
3.5 Stars

I ended my 2018 reading year with a short story collection by Charles de Lint. I enjoyed Dreams Underfoot and began my 2019 reading year with the second de Lint short story collection set in Newford.

The Ivory and the Horn is a fifteen tale collection that continues to explore the wonderful characters inhabiting the fictional city of Newford. Jilly, the free-spirited artist that knows everyone in town and believes in things outside the bounds of rationality. Maisie, a teenager determined to make a better life for herself despite living on the streets. Angel, the beautiful advocate for the lost, forgotten, and overlooked in the city. There are several other characters that makes Newford one of the most colorful, interesting fictional cities I have ever read.

This collection had three standout stories I enjoyed reading like the opening story, Waifs and Strays. That story featured the aforementioned Maisie and how she tried to gain a better perspective on her life on streets of Newford while trying to better her situation. The story, Forest is Crying, went in depth about a social worker who lost heart for his career after witnessing the death of a toddler. The story, The Pochade Box, about a box owned by the aforementioned artist Jilly and why she keeps it her life. Those stories revealed the connection between city life and the supernatural. Also, de Lint drew upon Native American and Canadian folklore to give parabolic lessons in each story.

The Ivory and the Horn is another solid collection of short stories by Charles de Lint. I will admit that I liked the stories more in Dreams Underfoot. However, I will recommend The Ivory and the Horn for newcomers to Charles de Lint and long time readers of the author.
Profile Image for Otchen Makai.
311 reviews62 followers
October 19, 2021
Loved this book, from story to story. It followed along perfectly with the books before it, starting where the other stories left off, perfectly adding to their stories, while also adding in some new ones!

Someone once told me that this series didn't connect at all, that they just had some characters with the same name. This is incorrect. After reading this series in order, this being the third in the series, I can say with finality that they do connect, are following along, and do build a story.

It's really amazing to read along as De'Lints writing improves, grows, and his stories go deeper and further along. The first two books intrigue you, the third book entices you to keep going.

Though, I have a leg up since I've read a couple books that are way further in the series and have seen how much De'Lints writing grows and really takes on a life of its own down the road. So, for me, it's an even greater journey into the world he's built in Newford. The characters he has lovingly populated Newford with, the detail he put into each one's individual personality, life, story, and character.
It is an amazing world he builds, and I encourage everyone who is interested in urban fantasy to dive in and enjoy the ride.




Side note for friends:
(Strangers, feel free to skip this part!)

It's taking me a long time to get through each of these De'Lint books due to the fact I'm reading them all with another person. We only read them when we are together, and take turns reading it out loud to one another. It's our own fun little thing we do, so it's worth the wait for us.. (Though, I'd be lying if I didn't say I've been tempted to cheat and read ahead because I want to know the rest of the story.. but I've been strong so far. (; ..)
Highly recommend this series! <3
Profile Image for JeniReadABook.
440 reviews6 followers
September 23, 2017
I'm not going to lie, as much as I love Charles de Lint, I loathe short stories. I've never been a big fan of them. I'm not sure why I dislike them so much, but they just aren't my cup of tea. That being said, aside from the automatic negative points every book of short stories gets from me (just for being short stories and not being novel length) I must admit that de Lint does write better short stories than anyone else, in my humble opinion. So I honestly liked this book as much as I could possibly like a book of short stories. If it hadn't been the third book in the Newford series which I'm trying to read, I wouldn't have ever read it. However, because de Lint's full-length novels often are prefaced by his short stories, I was afraid that if I didn't read them I might miss some important detail about a character or setting if I skipped them. So I read them and enjoyed them as much as I was capable of enjoying short stories. There were a few that stood out as better than others, unsurprisingly it was the longer ones. LOL :-D Luckily the next book in the series, Trader, is a full-length novel.
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