Graham Joyce, a winner of the O. Henry Award, the British Fantasy Award, and the World Fantasy Award, lives in Leicester, England, with his family. His books include The Silent Land, Smoking Poppy, Indigo (a New York Times Notable Book of 2000), The Tooth Fairy (a Publishers Weekly Best Book of 1998), and Requiem, among others.
“Here is a keenly observed tale of a family in crisis, one that
mixes fantasy and psychiatry in a potent cocktail." —Stephen King,
"The Best Books I Read in 2012", Entertainment Weekly
“Ravishing. . . . [Joyce’s] writing is enthralling, agile and
effortless.” —The New York Times Book Review
“Joyce’s fiction is an unusual—and unusually
satisfying—hybrid. He’s interested in all the things that preoccupy
literary novelists: finely drawn characters, the beauty and sadness
of life’s inevitable transitions, families in all their ambiguous
and endlessly fascinating complexity. His prose is precise and
unsentimental. Yet into the fabric of these relationships he weaves
elements of folklore and myth.” —Laura Miller, Salon
“One of the most impressive fantasy books we’ve read in ages.”
—io9.com
“Reading Some Kind of Fairy Tale is a little like
stepping into an enormous, brilliantly camouflaged mantrap….
Joyce’s books are as seductive as anything you’ll find in
contemporary fiction.” —Richmond Times-Dispatch
“Clever, funny and poignant.” —Sarah Waters, author of The Little
Stranger
“Fans of novels featuring dark, haunted woods, overgrown English
moors and changelings hidden in the dense brush will be absolutely
delighted.” —BookPage
“Joyce’s fairy tale is one of dark and dangerous collision.” —The
Washington Post
“I became a rabidly devoted fan of Graham Joyce’s the first
time I read his work.” —Peter Straub
“Some Kind of Fairy Tale is fantastically formed, complete with a
gently portentous premise, a marvelous cast of characters, and a
narrative as smart and self-reflexive as it is at first
old-fashioned. Enigmatic and intellectual, yes, yet readily
accessible and massively satisfying, Joyce’s latest is a joy.”
—Tor.com
“One of my best reads in decades.” —L. Dean Murphy,
Bookreporter
“I won’t bother saying Graham Joyce deserves to find a wider
audience in America; rather I think the American audience deserves
to find him.” —Jonathan Lethem
“Dark and haunting.” —The Free Lance–Star
“Some Kind of Fairy Tale is all about passing through walls:
between people, between truths, between worlds. But where a lesser
writer might strain to keep all those layers in focus, Joyce
projects a vision of the heart as rich and ethereal as the age-old
tradition Fairy Tale invokes. . . . As its title trumpets, Some
Kind of Fairy Tale meditates on the nature of what it means to tell
stories. But wisely and hauntingly, it does so through a
spellbinding story of its own.” —The Onion’s A.V. Club
“Joyce’s fiction has always displayed a certain generosity of
spirit that lifts it above the ordinary. . . . Joyce as a writer is
a master charmer. . . . Mesmerizing.” —The Guardian (London)
“Haunting, brilliant. . . . Some Kind of Fairytale works the same
sort of magic [as The Limits of Enchantment] and in many ways is
even more accomplished. This time, people, pay attention.”
—Locus
“Reality and fairy tale are beautifully interwoven in this
contemplative story about relationships, love, and dreams. In a
unique blend of thriller and fantasy, Joyce creates a delightful
page-turner that his fans and newcomers alike will find hard to put
down.” —Booklist
Ask a Question About this Product More... |