I have discovered that there is a particular type of book that seems to really appeal to me, which I most commonly find within the Fantasy genre (but also existing in other categories as well). These particular books seem to have some specific themes in common. In very broad strokes, a few of these similarities are:
-) Though containing Fantasy elements, they are grounded in and focused on the real [physical] world; in fact, whether the reader decides magic is actually being portrayed tends to reveal more about the reader than the actual book.
-) The main character tends to be an adult narrator telling a story about a past time in their adolescence; during this past adolescent time they might have been forced to attempt to reconcile the real-seeming magic of a child's imagination with the incessant demands of the rational mature world.
-)Though not an autobiography in the typical sense, the author has added some very clear autobiographical elements to the character and story.
-)Usually the events of the actual story are not what the book is actually about; indeed, the events in the book are usually meant to either underscore a message of the book or to display some sort of symbolism.
Plenty of people could more aptly describe what I'm attempting, but a few examples might be Neil Gaiman's Ocean at the End of the Lane, Robert McCammon's Boy's Life, Ray Bradbury's Dandelion Wine, or Jo Walton's Among Us. Before any of them even existed, Lord Dunsany was showing the world how it should be done.
Dunsany wears his heart on his sleeve in this book, and the torn inner emotions and conflicting worlds (both real and imagined) of the main character seem to be the palpable emotions and conflicts of the author. Constantly vying for the devotion of the character, the old and the new maintain their tug of war. Nature and industry, Christian doctrine and pagan beliefs, imagination and mature responsibility; Dunsany struggles to find his place upon the spectrum of each one and is forced to reconcile a changing world with the immutable world of daydreams and desires.
Some readers (including myself, I must admit) might be momentarily turned off by long descriptions of shooting birds, or a whole chapter devoted to a day-long fox hunt. Yet, ultimately each of those descriptions belies the intended point Dunsany is trying to make; even the chapter-long fox pursuit eventually ends with a passage that reveals the futility of focusing on the fox hunt itself as anything too meaningful. Each seemingly mundane act or escapade of the main character highlights another little aspect of the over-arching painting Dunsany is trying to show the reader. This painting is not simply the natural beauty of his romanticized world or even what such a romantic world means to him, but also what it should mean to him.
In some ways the book is an extremely uplifting book flowing with rich descriptions of natural beauty and wonder, with an epic ending of dramatic proportions. On the other hand, the book is laced with extreme melancholy, and a despair over things lost which threaten to overwhelm the reader. Youth is glorified by Dunsany, not so much in a literal sense, but because youth are able to enjoy a carefree magic of imagination uninhibited by Western dogmas and priorities. "I have lived to see that being seventeen is no protection against becoming seventy, but to know this needs the experience of a life-time, for no imagination copes with it." He's mostly talking literally in the context of that passage, yet he also isn't in the grand scheme of the book. There is a certain inability of a child's mind to comprehend what can be lost with the passage of time; desperately grasping to regain those lost things, and accepting the limitations of attempting to do so, are core aspects of the book.
The war between the heart and the mind are made manifest in this book, and even the character of the doctor literally spelling out the battle lines between the two doesn't detract from the subtly soft application of the conflict in the book. What we think and what we feel are all too often separate drivers of our behavior, yet the little area where they overlap can often be the place of either frightening confusion or real wonder.
I may not be a hunting Irish nobleman with an estate and servants, but I still managed to connect with this book in a fairly personal way. I too am at a life stage where the imaginations of youth seem to fade away daily in the face of adult responsibilities; I too hold a deep love for nature that is constantly jarred by the realities of encroaching industry; I too, have very specific but vivid memories of a youth that I grasp tightly in order to maintain a connection with it. I have a lot of criticisms I could level at the Lord o' Dunsany if I wanted to, but I don't want to; I want to get lost over and over in his magical worlds with his magical words. No matter how imperfect his writing can be at times, it seems to perfectly resonate with me.