Joy Chant (born 13 January 1945) is a British fantasy writer. She is best known for the three House of Kendreth novels, published 1970 to 1983. Her legal name is Eileen Joyce Rutter.[1]
Joy Chant | |
---|---|
Born | London, England, UK | 13 January 1945
Occupation | Writer |
Nationality | British |
Period | 1970– |
Genre | Fantasy |
Biography
editEileen Joyce (nickname, "Joy") Chant was born in London.[1] She began writing in her early teens, and began publishing fiction while working as a Schools Librarian in London.[2] She attended college in Wales, where her father had been stationed during World War II.[3] Later, she lived with her husband and children in Leigh-on-Sea, Essex.[3]
Works
editChant's first novel was Red Moon and Black Mountain, a parallel world fiction. According to the author, it was based on elaborate fantasy legends and imaginary games she began enacting and writing as a young child. After learning to read at two and a half, she mostly read folklore and mythology, not knowing of adult fantasy until she was twenty.[4] As for Vandarei:
... it began as a playworld, the sort that a lot of children have, and I was of course the Queen, the character about whom I created the adventures. But I had the disposition of a pedant. I didn't really want to pretend: I wanted to know, to be sure, to get it right. So even in its childish form this playworld tended to become concise, factual. As I grew older, horses became a passion and the playworld developed into "Equitania"—the horse motif strengthening. During this time the history of the country itself assumed an importance and I began to actually write. At fifteen, however, the last links with "Equitania" wavered and the name "Vandarei" appeared. The Queen was abandoned and ceased to be an avatar of myself, becoming a character whom I manipulated, but with whom I no longer especially identified.[4]
Red Moon and Black Mountain was published in the U.K. by George Allen & Unwin in 1970, and in the U.S. by Ballantine Books in 1971 as part of its celebrated Ballantine Adult Fantasy series, with a cover illustration by Bob Pepper. The House of Kendreth series comprises Red Moon and two related books, The Grey Mane of Morning (1977) and When Voiha Wakes (1983), as well as a short story, "The Coming of the Starborn" (1983).[5]
Chant's other major work is The High Kings (1983), illustrated by George Sharp, designed by David Larkin and edited by Ian and Betty Ballantine. It is a reference work on the King Arthur legends[3] and the Matter of Britain, incorporating retellings of the legends. She has also written numerous articles on fantasy fiction.
Selected publications
editFantasy novels
edit- House of Kendreth series
- Red Moon and Black Mountain (1970)
- The Grey Mane of Morning (1977)
- When Voiha Wakes (1983)
Nonfiction
edit- Fantasy and Allegory in Literature for Young Readers (1971)
- The High Kings (1983, George Allen & Unwin), with Ian and Betty Ballantine, George Sharp, and David Larkin in collaboration; revised edition 1989, Allen & Unwin
Short stories
edit- "The Coming of the Starborn", Lands of Never, ed. Maxim Jakubowski (Allen & Unwin, 1983), ISBN 0-04-823239-4[1]
- "Die Mauern von Kophitel (The Walls of Kophitel)" (1983) – published only in German as translated by Mechtild Sandberg[citation needed]
Awards
editRed Moon and Black Mountain won the Mythopoeic Fantasy Award in 1972; The Grey Mane of Morning was a runner up for the same award in 1981, with tenth place in the Locus Poll Award the same year; When Voiha Wakes won the Mythopoeic Fantasy Award in 1984. The High Kings, which took second place in the Locus Poll Award, won the 1984 World Fantasy Special Award for Professional Work. It was also a nominee of the Hugo Award for Best Non-Fiction Book.
References
edit- ^ a b c "Joy Chant – Summary Bibliography". ISFDB. Retrieved 2015-02-26.
- ^ Chant, Joy (1976). Red Moon and Black Mountain. New York: E.P. Dutton. p. dust jacket. ISBN 0-525-38193-7.
- ^ a b c Raymond H. Thompson, "Interview with Joy Chant", The Camelot Project (d.lib.rochester.edu/camelot), 1999. Retrieved 2015-02-26. Interview of Chant at her house in Leigh-on-Sea, Essex, 20 May 1989.
- ^ a b Joy Chant, afterword to When Voiha Wakes (Ballantine, 1983).
- ^ Jessica Yates, "Chant, (Eileen) Joy" in St. James Guide To Fantasy Writers, ed. David Pringle, London, St. James Press, 1996, ISBN 1-55862-205-5, pp. 104–06.