By Victoria Goddard
We  are, as a species, lovers of myth one and all, and the retelling only  stops briefly when a myth dies for the first time and is given a  concrete form by some scholar or other.  The Greek gods died as  worshipped divinities long ago, but their myths never have. When we meet  the goddess of love in 
The Moon's Fire-Eating Daughter
, by John Myers  Myers, or in Marie Phillips’ 
Gods Behaving Badly
, we have no problem  recognizing Homer’s laughing Aphrodite. When Harry Potter encounters  “Fluffy” in 
The Philosopher's Stone
, surely half the charm for us as  readers lies in our recognition of Cerberus, guardian of the land of the  dead, who was charmed by cakes and by music (then again, who isn’t?).  
This  is barely to touch upon the subject of the 
mythophiloi.  What of  the different takes on what it might mean to be a Norse god in the  modern world in Neil Gaiman’s 
American Gods
 or Douglas Adams’ 
The Long, Dark Tea-Time of the Soul
?  And what about all those tellings and  retellings of fairy tales?  Those, too,are myths.  Not simply those in  the Fairy Tales series edited by Terry Windling (though they are worth  reading) or the stories by Oscar Wilde, but all those parodies, loving  and sarcastic, that weave their way into the works of Terry Pratchett  and Patricia C. Wrede, Peter S. Beagle’s
 The Last Unicorn
 or John  Barnes’ 
One For The Morning Glory
, which feels like many tales but, like  Barnes’ use of words (the hunting of the gazebo, the drinks in the  stupors, that great weapon, the pismire . . .), never seem to mean quite  what you think it means.
Thinking about it, I might be  able to salvage the mythic quality of 
The Princess Bride
 by placing it  into this category, given the play between the story and its frame in  that book. To the narrator, the book is a talisman and a thing of power,  the mystery -- for he claims he has never read it -- at the centre of  his life.  That the narrator is so insistently this-worldly and makes  audacious claims about the historicity of his work is part of the charm,  the glamour, the enchantment (as it is for that greatest poet of the  Middle Ages, Dante). The frame narrative is one of the purest examples  of verisimilitude I have ever read; but it, too, is a kind of fairy  tale.  But more on those in part III.
Victoria Goddard has lived in more of Canada than most people  even know exist.  She has lived from the East Coast to the prairies,  from the High Arctic to lake country, from villages at the end of the  road to Canada’s largest city.  Although in the midst of a five-year  doctorate in medieval literature, she has managed to avoid breaking her  record of not living for more than three years consecutively in any one  house by haring off to Europe periodically to learn languages and look  at medieval manuscripts.  A keen reader, particularly of fantasy (from  all periods and places), she also writes (as-yet-unpublished) novels,  mostly on the subject of the lives that lie behind the fairy stories,  trying to combine pithy details of not-so-ordinary days with sometimes  all-too-matter-of-fact magic.  
 
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