Brilliant books based on folklore
Our edit of some of the best books inspired by folklore and traditional stories, introduced by Lucy Holland.
I see folklore as collected experience, compressed into the easily-communicable form of stories, poems and sayings. Its wisdom can be at once profound and extremely silly. It is uniquely human, able to speak to people on a fundamental level in a way quite unlike anything else. This universal appeal fascinates me. One glance at an index like the Aarne–Thompson–Uther reveals that the same stories crop up again and again. The same narrative patterns. Although separated by time, geography and beliefs, we all fear similar things. We take joy in similar things. This truth lies at the heart of mythology and folklore, and so helps to account for the enduring popularity of books exploring folkloric motifs.
Arthur is probably the most famous folk hero in Celtic mythology, but his canon barely scratches the surface. In writing my books on folklore, I am crooking a finger, hoping to beckon readers into the darker depths of Celtic myth. There is much to discover there – about ourselves and our world. Other authors of contemporary folklore books are doing the same in their chosen fields, turning to the voices of the ancestors, extending a hand across time to pluck new meaning from ancient tales.
Here are brilliant books based on folklore and traditional tales, including YA, fantasy and poetry.