In Sharon Black’s “The Magic of
Harry Potter: Symbols and Heroes of Fantasy” she stated that children need imaginary
heroes found in books to help them cope with their daily lives. Black gives the example “The Mirror of Erised is unreal, but the fact that a child longs to be loved and protected
by her family is true…The child may
find it easier to face these fears when the abstract feelings are given form by
Harry’s experiences.” This directly
relates to The Forgotten Beasts of Eld
by Patricia A. McKillip, as it is a coming of age story. While Tam is maturing with age and entering
manhood, Sybel is attempting to find herself.
With the use of magical worlds, wizardry, flying dragons and talking
animals who respond to mystical calls, McKillip like the author of Harry
Potter, J.K. Rowling create a fantasy world that allows readers to use their imagination. This in turn, allows children not only to
connect with the books that they are reading but as Black pointed out, “Fantasy
empowers its readers through the unreal truths and the mythical heroes that it
shares.” While children who read both Harry Potter and The Forgotten Beasts of Eld will not fly on mythical creatures,
they will be able to connect children with broken or untraditional families,
the challenges of growing up including the struggle of attempting to find
oneself in a chaotic world.
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