City of Georgetown, Texas
Picks & Pans

‘A Fine and Private Place’ by Peter S. Beagle

afineandprivateplace1‘A Fine and Private Place’ by Peter S. Beagle, 1960

Peter S. Beagle is perhaps best known for his classic work of fantasy, ‘The Last Unicorn.’ But it was with ‘A Fine and Private Place’ that Beagle began his literary career—at the incredibly young age of nineteen. Turning the last page of the book, I marveled that someone so young could have penned such an astonishing story. The dexterity of the prose, the presentation of themes, the layering of characters and events—this all suggests a mind developed and seasoned far beyond that of a nineteen-year-old boy.

‘A Fine and Private Place’ is, on the surface, a ghost tale, but like the best fiction, the book is much more than the story. A strange man lives alone in a graveyard. He makes his home in an old, forgotten mausoleum. We learn that he has spent the last twenty years in the graveyard, never leaving it, and the only way he eats is by the help of a talking raven, who flaps in every day with scraps of food stolen from different places of the city. The man, incidentally, can see and talk to ghosts. He helps them become adjusted to death, ironically, as he is alive. But in the end it is a ghost—or pair of ghosts—who help him understand life.

The book is an absorbing literary exploration of the complex nature of human relationships, and how relationships can make all the difference in a meaningful life.




‘The King of Elfland’s Daughter’ by Lord Dunsany, 1924

kingofelfland'sdaughter‘The King of Elfland’s Daughter’ by Lord Dunsany, 1924

Anyone who delights in fantasy novels will fall immediately under the spell of ‘The King of Elfland’s Daughter’ by Lord Dunsany. This was my first foray into a Dunsany novel, and I can’t imagine a better introduction. ‘The King of Elfland’s Daughter’ is a charming tale of adventure and magic. It is shot through with mystery and humor and a wild, searing beauty.

In the small village-town of Erl, nothing extraordinary or noteworthy ever transpires; there is no great hero or villain to set the town apart from any other village. One day the village elders gather together and decide that they want something special for their village. They discuss and argue, and finally they conclude that the best way to establish notoriety is for them to have someone magical in power at the lord’s castle.

Thus, Alveric, the son of the current lord, is sent on a quest to bring back the daughter of the King of Elfland. With the help of an old witch, who fashions a magical sword made from lightning bolts and strange runes, Alveric sets out for Elfland. He discovers that the border of Elfland is not very far from Erl, lapping and undulating like waves on a shore.

And that is the beginning of a magical story.