McKillip is a big dog of late-20th-century fantasy, but this was the first time I’d read her. This is about a couple who live by the sea—Megan’s a dreamy artist who does seascapes and Jonah’s a grumpy shop owner who sells maritime trinkets—and the way they both end up entranced by what the jacket text calls “fairies” but which are perhaps more properly nereids, or sea nymphs. There’s a brother, Adam, and a sister, Nereis, and their mother Doris or Dory (who really was a Greek sea goddess). McKillip writes beautiful prose, almost luxurious in its focus on colour and texture, that nevertheless doesn’t stray away from sense. It lends itself really well to a story where the fantastical enters the real. It’s sort of urban fantasy-inflected, but in a coastal town, not a big city, and not magical realism either; this is proper committed fantasy, only the secondary world is within our own. Megan has to go rescue Jonah from Nereis and her song at the end, which of course I loved. The ecological message comes through perhaps a touch overtly, but I guess, since it was 30 years ago and we haven’t done much to save the sea, the urgency was justified. Source: 99p Kindle copy