The Books of Faerie
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| The Books of Faerie | |
Cover of the first The Books of Faerie collected edition, showing Queen Titania |
|
| Publisher | DC Comics (Vertigo Comics) |
|---|---|
| Format | Mini-series |
| Publication date | 1997 - 1999 |
| Number of issues | 10 full length issues 4 back-up strips |
| Main character(s) | Titania Auberon |
| Creative team | |
| Writer(s) | Bronwyn Carlton John Ney Rieber |
| Artist(s) | Peter Gross Vince Locke Ryan Kelly Hermann Meija |
| Colorist(s) | Gloria Vasquez Danny Vozzo Alex Sinclair |
| Creator(s) | Neil Gaiman Charles Vess |
The Books of Faerie was a series of three mini-series spun off from Vertigo Comics' series The Books of Magic written by Bronwyn Carlton (two series) and John Ney Rieber (one series). It featured characters used predominantly in the parent series - Titania, Auberon and Molly O'Reilly - to tell stories set in the realm of Faerie prior to the start of The Books of Magic, and later in the present era. Carlton was also intended to be the writer of an ongoing The Books of Faerie series, which was then reduced to a miniseries called The Books of Faerie: Serpent's Tooth before being abandoned.
Contents |
[edit] Background
The Books of Faerie was initially published as a spin-off when the ongoing The Books of Magic series written by John Ney Reiber proved to be popular with readers. Editor Stuart Moore approached writer Bronwyn Carlton to script the first three issue series: Carlton wrote a series which brought back some of the ambiguity around whether Timothy Hunter was Queen Titania's son that Reiber had attempted to dispell in his early issues on the parent title.[1] The success of the series led to Carlton writing the next limited series and a handful of back-up strips published in the main The Books of Magic monthly. These proved to be "well received" by the audience,[2] which led Vertigo to consider how they could best capitalise on the new property.
In 1999, they made an announcement regarding two new The Books of Faerie projects, the first being a third miniseries called The Books of Faerie: Molly's Story starring the popular character of Molly O'Reilly and written by her creator, John Ney Rieber. The four issue mini-series was published at the end of 1999, and established a new status quo - and deep connection with Faerie - for the character that Vertigo planned to explore in an ongoing The Books of Faerie monthly series with Molly as the central character. The series would be written by Bronwyn Carlton,[3] with Linda Medley inking her own pencils.[4] Bronwyn Carlton also wrote four The Books of Faerie back-up strips, which were published in the regular The Books of Magic ongoing series in issues 57-59 and 62, to re-introduce the characters and concepts that she intended to use in the planned ongoing series.
The new series was intended to focus on Molly, Sturm the Troll and the Gyvv to tell stories of modern day Faerie.[2] However, Vertigo reconsidered and decided to cut back the release from an ongoing monthly to a five issue mini-series instead. The Books of Faerie: Serpent's Tooth would have showed Molly undertaking "a quest to save the faerie realm from ultimate destruction" and discovering the true nature of her role as protector of Faerie,[4] with one of the back up strip stories suggesting that the intention was to make Molly a future Queen of Faerie.[5] The mini-series was initially planned for release in June 2000, before being indefinitely shelved.[4]
[edit] Storylines
[edit] The Books of Faerie
The first volume of The Books of Faerie details the fall of the Regent King Obrey and the journey to power of the ruler known as Titania. Her life began as an ordinary human girl named Maryrose, living in poverty in the Mundane World with her mother. Maryrose is tempted by a flitling to travel to Faerie, and once there is trapped after she eats the food: she manages to turn the situation to her advantage, however, soon becoming the favourite of the ruling queen, Dymphna. She soon also attracts the attention of the King, whose desperation to produce an heir to the throne - and trust of the master manipulator the Amadan - causes him to plan a desperate course of action: he enchants his wife into a dead oak tree, and takes Maryrose as his new wife - giving her a glamour owned by Dymphna that allows her to pass as a true faerie.[6]
At her coronation, Maryrose takes the name Titania and settles down to be a good queen to her husband and the people of Faerie. However, the Regent is soon killed in battle with the true heir to the throne of Faerie, Auberon: in returning to take the throne, he also takes Titania as his wife to reunite the two sides of the war, unaware that she is not a true-born faerie. Shortly after the wedding, he instructs Titania that they must produce an heir to cement the new peace. Embittered at the loss of her loving husband and his replacement with one who treats her as a political pawn, Titania travels back to her old home where she meets the falconer Tamlin and begins an affair with him.[6]
The affair continues until Titania falls pregant: the whole Court are overjoyed - and especially Auberon, who immediately sends for his old brownie nanny Bridie to care for Titania and aid the birth. When the baby is born, is it a purebred human boy and Titania has to beg Bridie to pretend it was stillborn smuggle it away to the Mundane World to prevent Auberon discovering his queen's infidelity - and harming her son. This she does - leaving Auberon wracked with guilt that his choice of nursemaid might have killed his son, and Titania knowing that she has betrayed her husband but saved her child.[6] It later becomes apparent that Titania believes the Opener Timothy Hunter to be the child that Bridie hid, although Tim himself is told that he isn't by Auberon.[7][8]
[edit] The Books of Faerie: Auberon's Tale
The second volume of The Books of Faerie jumps further back in time, showing the end of the reign of King Magnus and the rise of Auberon and his regent Obrey. King Magnus has become obsessed with the superiority of purebred faeries, and oppresses the other races of Faerie such as the flitlings and the brownies. He also organises games, where the other races fight to the death for the amusement of the Court, with the "contestants" being selected by the Amadan. The best fighter they have is a loyal troll called Sturm, who the King decides he will fight to show how superiour the faeries are: Sturm is too loyal to fight back, but is confused and goaded into striking back and killing the King by a disembodied voice (hinted at belonging to the Amadan).[9]
Sturm flees, leaving the Court facing the prospect of another war as Magnus died without heirs. As the two main candidates vie for support, Lord Obrey is approached by the Amadan who tells him of another solution: there is a distant member of Magnus' family still living on the borders of Faerie who holds the direct line of succession and could unite the two opposing sides. Obrey rushes to collect the boy-king Auberon before his opponents learn of him and have him killed, finding him being raised by his cousin, a faerie called Dymphna who Obrey once loved and lost, and a brownie called Bridie. The four return to the Court, and with Obrey's wise and steady guidance Auberon is crowned King and defeats his opponents on the field of battle.[9]
Obrey is widely seen in the Court as positioning himself as the power behind the throne, something not helped when he marries Dymphna after the two rekindle their old love: Dymphna is also Auberon's cousin, and if the young king was to die Obrey would enjoy a strong claim on the throne. However, Obrey is truly loyal to the king - until the Amadan tricks Auberon into publically slighting Lord Obrey, driving a wedge between them and leading Obrey to think that he might as well take power for himself. Before he can do anything drastic, however, Auberon runs away from the Court to try to find his missing sister, proclaiming Obrey's right to rule as Regent until his return.[9] One of the later back-up stories suggested that Auberon also left because he was aware of the danger he was in, and struck up a romantic relationship with an Elf Lord's daughter whilst searching for his sister.[5]
[edit] The Books of Faerie: Molly's Story
The third The Books of Faerie story jumped forward from the previous volumes, telling a story in the modern era and reintroducing the popular character of Molly O'Reilly, cursed by Queen Titania and so unable to eat human food and left floating an inch above the ground. This brings her to the attention of the local media, and she is proclaimed a living saint by the Church - something which only adds to his black mood. As she tries to escape, she passes a toy shop which is selling a new range of fairy toys - one of which she recognises as the flitling Yarrow and releases. Yarrow tell Molly that she was accompanying King Auberon to the edge of Faerie to find the gemstone Twilight in the hope of undoing the wrong his wife did to Molly when they were attacked, and she ended up in the toystore.[10] Reluctantly, Molly agrees to go to Faerie to help free Auberon, taking her cat Fithy with her.
Along the way, they meet another faerie called Briar Rose who offers to help them, but abandons Yarrow when she is captured by a demon that you can only say yes to. When Molly is accidentally transformed into a flitling, she discovers that Rose intends to kill her, Auberon and Titania once they are all found:[11] fortunately, Molly escapes when Filthy magically grows wings and carries her away. Molly manages to free Yarrow from the demon, discovering that it learnt its power from the demon Barbatos.[12]
They discover Queen Titania captured by Barbatos, who has a new "master" - a giant green frog-like creature that the demon is forcing the faeries to build a lake for. A disguised Auberon is one of the workforce, and he and Titania are singled out by Rose for execution: she is in fact a flitling grown to human size as punishment for leading her kind in a rebellion, something which she intends to do again once she has had her revenge. Molly foils her plans by convincing Barbatos' master to relinquish Twilight, which has transformed him from a common frog, leaving the demon powerless. He is returned to his imprisonment in the Dreaming, and the faeries freed. All that remains is for Twilight to choose a new master so that it can protect Faerie for all time: the stone chooses Molly, curing her numerous enchantments and returning her home to resume her normal life again . . . until Faerie has need of her.[13]
[edit] Back up strips
The first back-up strip story reintroduced the troll Sturm, telling a tale set in his youth of how he met a beautiful lady and returned her "silver treasure" - actually a snake that had caused the death of his two older brothers - to her. In return for his kindness, Sturm has his two brothers returned to him, and is gifted a wristlet that lets him walk under water without harm - something that "may help you to save Faerie one day, when all seems lost".[14] The second told a tale of young Auberon being attacked by monsters in the night, but saved by a creature called the Gyvv that he has befriended that Bridie his nursemaid eventually identifies as a mythical creature called a Fotch.[15] The third tale told of a young girl called Bryony who is seduced by a Kelpie - a male sea-dwelling creature that seduces young girls and drowns them once it has grown bored of them. She distrusts the creature, but eventually believes its protestations that this time is different and ends up dead on the beach within days.[16]
The final tale showed the Gyvv and an unnamed woman discussing the history of Faerie once its time had ended, "setting the stage for the new ongoing series". The history ran from Faerie's first ruler Huon the Small, to mad Magnus and his rejection of his illegitimate son the Amadan, to the modern day of Faerie. The history revealed some snippets of information about Molly, suggesting that she became a queen of Faerie after marrying the unnamed woman's son, and worked with the Gyvv and Sturm to defeat numerous threats to Faerie, such as the woman with the "silver treasure" and the Wild Hunt. The tale closed with the woman and the Gyvv resolving to "cast the spell that will spin out the realm of Faerie once again!", suggesting that the events seen in the history might belong in an alternate, previous version of the realm.[5]
[edit] Collected editions
Two collected editions of The Books of Faerie have been published, collecting the first two mini-series. Each includes one of the The Books of Magic annuals, meaning that the annuals' author John Ney Rieber is co-credited as writer on the collected editions. The second collection also includes the first two of the back-up stories from The Books of Magic ongoing series, which sometimes causes people to assume that the entirety of those issues of the ongoing series are reprinted in the collection.[17]
The collections were:
- The Books of Faerie
- The Books of Faerie by Bronwyn Carlton
- Arcana: The Books of Magic Annual #1 by John Ney Rieber
- The Books of Faerie: Auberon's Tale
- The Books of Faerie: Auberon's Tale by Bronwyn Carlton
- The Books of Magic Annual #1 by John Ney Rieber
- Sturm and the Silver Treasure by Bronwyn Carlton
- Auberon Finds a Friend by Bronwyn Carlton
The remaining issues are uncollected.
[edit] See also
[edit] References
- ^ Interview with John Ney Rieber, 1 December 1995, <http://www.seriejournalen.dk/tegneserie_indhold.asp?ID=15>. Retrieved on 28 April 2008
- ^ a b Leblanc, David (1999), THE COMIC BOOK NET ELECTRONIC MAGAZINE, comic book shopper, <http://comicbookshopper.com/CBEM_1999/CBEM-199.TXT>
- ^ Gross, Peter (May 1999), The Books of Magic: "In Defence of His Country", DC Comics
- ^ a b c Atchison, Lee (November 1999), “On Books and Waiting: Linda Medley”, Sequential Tart, <http://www.sequentialtart.com/archive/nov99/medley.shtml>
- ^ a b c Carlton, Bronwyn (July 1999), “The Books of Faerie: Beginnings”, The Books of Magic #62: Endings (DC Comics)
- ^ a b c Rieber, John Ney & Carlton, Bronwyn (1998), The Books of Faerie, Titan Books, ISBN 1-85286-916-x
- ^ Rieber, John Ney (1995), The Books of Magic: Bindings, DC Comics, ISBN 1-56389-187-5
- ^ Rieber, John Ney (1995), The Books of Magic: Summonings, DC Comics, ISBN 1-56389-265-0
- ^ a b c Carlton, Bronwyn & Rieber, John Ney (November 1, 1999), The Books of Faerie: Auberon's Tale, Vertigo, ISBN 1-563-89502-1
- ^ Rieber, John Ney (September 1999), The Books of Faerie - Molly's Story Book 1: Twilight, DC Comics
- ^ Rieber, John Ney (October 1999), The Books of Faerie - Molly's Story Book 2: Iron and Thorn, DC Comics
- ^ Rieber, John Ney (November 1999), The Books of Faerie - Molly's Story Book 3: Tearing Off Their Wings, DC Comics
- ^ Rieber, John Ney (December 1999), The Books of Faerie - Molly's Story Book 4: The Importance of Being Evil, DC Comics
- ^ Carlton, Bronwyn (February 1999), “The Books of Faerie: Sturm and the Silver Treasure”, The Books of Magic #57: The Wager (DC Comics)
- ^ Carlton, Bronwyn (March 1999), “The Books of Faerie: Auberon Finds a Friend”, The Books of Magic #58: William's Tale Part 1 (DC Comics)
- ^ Carlton, Bronwyn (April 1999), “The Books of Faerie: The Kelpie's Love”, The Books of Magic #59: William's Tale Part 2 (DC Comics)
- ^ Millar, Mark, Books of Magic, <http://tplist.millarworld.net/booksofmagic.html> "Inexplicably, although it ran until issue 74, the remaining issues have not been collected; nevertheless, it was continued in The Names of Magic, which has begun to be collected. Two later issues were collected in Books of Faerie; see below"

