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Among Others Paperback – 21 Mar. 2013
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- Print length416 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherCorsair
- Publication date21 Mar. 2013
- Dimensions13 x 2.5 x 19.7 cm
- ISBN-109781472106537
- ISBN-13978-1472106537
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Review
If you love SF and fantasy, if reading it formed your teen years, if you do remember the magic you used to do, if you remember the absolute joy of first discovering those books, then read this. (Robin Hobb)
Funny, acute, and impassioned (Ursula K. Le Guin)
A hymnal for the clever and odd - an inspiration and a lifeline to anyone who has ever felt in the world, but not of it. (Cory Doctorow)
Most fantasies evade opportunities to make the impossible plausible, to give magic accountability in a realistic setting and moral and emotional weight in a modern novel. Jo Walton accepts the double challenge and meets it with courage and skill . . . Among Others is a funny, thoughtful, acute and absorbing story all the way through, but in the magic parts it is more than that. (Ursula K. Le Guin Guardian)
Possibly earning itself the Book of the Year title is Jo Walton's thought provoking Among Others, which stays with you for a long time after reading. It is the story of a young girl from a magical family who is sent to a mundane boarding school and, through her discovery of classic SF novels, has her mind and world expanded. (Independent on Sunday)
A lovely story, unlike anything I've ever read before: funny, touching, and gently magical. (Patrick Rothfuss)
There are the books you want to give all your friends, and there are the books you wish you could go back and give your younger self. And then there's the rare book, like Jo Walton's Among Others, that's both. (io9.com)
Among Others is about a young girl brought up in a magical family who is sent to a mundane, non-magical school; a captivatingly told mirror image of Harry Potter. (The Guardian)
I don't believe I've seen, either in fiction or in memoir, as brilliant and tone-perfect an account of what discovering SF and fantasy can mean to its young readers... Remarkable. (Gary K. Wolfe Locus)
Beautifully crafted... Among Others calls to those who desire a wild, magical world in place of the one they have but eventually learn that their own lives are the greatest story of all. (Bloomsbury Review)
Compelling... Never deigning to transcend the genre to which it is clearly a love letter, this outstanding (and entirely teen-appropriate) tale draws its strength from a solid foundation of sense-of-wonder and what-if. (Publishers Weekly, starred review)
Book Description
About the Author
Product details
- ASIN : 1472106539
- Publisher : Corsair (21 Mar. 2013)
- Language : English
- Paperback : 416 pages
- ISBN-10 : 9781472106537
- ISBN-13 : 978-1472106537
- Dimensions : 13 x 2.5 x 19.7 cm
- Best Sellers Rank: 107,202 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- 1,530 in Coming of Age
- 2,315 in Contemporary Fantasy (Books)
- 9,716 in Science Fiction (Books)
- Customer reviews:
About the author

Jo Walton comes from Wales but lives in Montreal, exclusively in the first person. My plan is to live to be ninety-nine and write a book every year.
The question people most often ask is where to start with my books. I've published fifteen novels now, three poetry collections, a short story collection and a two essay collections -- and a travel memoir thingy. My novels are all different from each other, and really, where to start depends on what you like.
My most popular book is definitely my Hugo and Nebula award winning Among Others, which is a fantasy novel about a fifteen year old girl who reads science fiction. It's written in diary form, and set in Wales in 1979 and 1980. It's a book about what happens after you've saved the world -- Mori's sister sacrified herself and Mori became disabled in a fight to defeat their evil witch mother, and they won. Now she has to go to a new school, on her own, and cope with life and the ethics of doing magic at all, while reading for escape, solace, and ways of coping with the world.
Lent is a historical fantasy about Savonarola.It's set in Florence and Hell between 1492 and 1498. If you like historical fiction like Wolf Hall, this would be a good one to start with.
Or What You Will, which came out in July 2020, is about a character who lives in a writer's head and is afraid of what's going to happen to him when she dies. It's themes are story, death, and renaissances. It's a good one if you like metafiction, or if you've read several of my other books and liked them all. When I'm writing a book I always think it's kind of weird, and this one really is.
My Real Children won the Tiptree award in 2015. It's an alternate history -- well actually two diverging realities. It's about a woman with dementia in a nursing home who remembers two different versions of her whole life, and the book covers her whole life twice from the split in 1949 to 2015. This is a book many people enjoy, and it's the one I recommend as a starting point if you don't usually read SF or fantasy. If you want to buy one of my books for a relative, this is the one to go for. It's a crossover with women's fiction -- and in addition to the Tiptree it won the American Librarian Association RUSA award in that category. It also has a brilliant French translation and is my most popular novel in French. It is, as far as I know, the only alternate history of the EU.
My trilogyThessaly, consisting of The Just City, The Philosopher Kings, and Necessity, is about gods and philosophers through all of time setting up Plato's Republic, with ten thousand Greek speaking kids, and what happens after. The books follow three generations of the Republic, and feature Socrates, Apollo, and a ton of Platonic dialogue. They are about serious subjects -- like consent issues, and what is the good life, but they're also fun,
I have another trilogy, the Small Change books, Farthing, Ha'Penny and Half a Crown. These are alternate history, set in a world where Britain made peace with Hitler in May of 1941 after holding out for a year alone, and the US never came into WWII. The first two are set in 1949, and the third in 1960. Farthing has the form of a country house mystery, Ha'Penny is a theatre thriller, and Half a Crown is about a debutante about to have a season and go to Oxford, but in a dystopia. These are for people who like mysteries, or alternate history, and can cope with applicability. My favourite description of these is "like a stiletto wrapped in a buttered crumpet."
My World Fantasy award winning novel Tooth and Claw is the easiest to describe briefly -- it's a sentimental Victorian novel about dragons who eat each other. It's written like Trollope, and all the characters are dragons, worried about marrying well, and religious issues, and being promoted, or eaten. My favourite description of this is "simultaneously creepy and charming"
My first three novels are related -- The King's Peace and the King's Name are one book in two volumes, and they're Arthurian fantasy with a female hero. The Prize in the Game is a retelling of the Irish myth the Tain, which had been backstory to the first two, but which I wrote when I realised most people aren't all that familiar with the Tain. These are early work but actually I love them to bits. Also, they gave me the John W. Campbell award for best new writer when this was all I'd written, so some other people must think they're good. But I must admit I have figured out some stuff since.
What Makes This Book so Great is a collection of blog posts originally published on Tor.com, and so is An Informal History of the Hugos. WMtBsG is just a selection of good ones, and aIHotH is a set of posts I did about the Hugo awards, and the field generally, between 1953 and 2000. If you like the stuff about books in Among Others, or if you want to increase your TBR list by hearing me burble about how great things are, you want these.
Visiting Friends is a novella-length travel memoir about a road trip I took through Europe in 2019.
My real grown up website with info about her books, stories, plays and poetry is at http://www.jowaltonbooks.com There's a blog there as well. And I'm on Twitter as @bluejowalton and on Goodreads.
My Patreon, which is for poetry, and which supports my book buying, art viewing, and theatre going habits, and is the best way to support me directly (though buying my books is also great!) is at
https://www.patreon.com/bluejo
If you like my poetry, the collections are Muses and Lurkers (Rune Press 2001) Sibyls and Spaceships (NESFA 2009) and The Helix and the Hard Road (Aqueduct 2013). I'm hoping to be able to bring out a big collection in a year or so.
I have a short story collection called Starlings from Tachyon, which collects all my short fiction to date, as well as some poetry, and a play. I don't write a whole lot of short fiction -- this is absolutely all the short work I have written in the time I wrote all these novels. There's one story in the universe of the Small Change books, but otherwise nothing is closely related to anything, but you can see themes I'm interested in, like what happens after the ends and at the edges of stories.
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It's fair to say that not much happens in the novel and it's mostly about what Mori thinks; however, I think it's unfair to say that as a criticism. While I was uncertain about where things were going at times I never once felt that I was unwilling to keep on going. I don't want to say that the end came out of nowhere, but I did notice that I was at the 90% mark with some surprise. I would have happily continued reading, but I didn't need to in order to feel that the novel had come to a satisfactory end. There is a climax, of course. But it could have been delayed and I would have been happy. As the novel comes from Mori's perspective, the other characters can seem a little flat at times, but this flatness is the understanding of the narrator, her inability to comprehend motives and impulses. It comes across as a real snapshot from a real person's life, which may be because it is in some way autobiographical, even if it is entirely unclear how far this extends.
If I were forced to be critical, I'd note that there are some unfortunate representations in the categories of gender and sexuality. But there are similar comments about disability, despite the disabled protagonist. The book is set in the seventies, and has the air of a memoire as much as a novel - what it describes is lived experience, not a manual for socially responsible behaviour. It's lived experience with fairies, but still reads authentically. As a genuine criticism, the subplot with Wim deserves some attention. <spoiler>Wim is the beautiful young man Mori meets at her SF book club, whom she discovers may have got a girl pregnant and then abandoned her. There are some complexities to the story, but ultimately she concludes that Wim deserves the benefit of the doubt, and that the girl in question was as or more responsible for the pregnancy scare than he was. The book is set in the late seventies. I cannot expect the protagonist to be flawless. But it sits uncomfortably that a young woman is being presented as a liar, or at least more responsible for birth control than her sexual partner, and that everyone believed her that the partner is question was a terrible man, which is not the usual narrative. Writing this on 19/11/2014, I can report that in today's news a CNN reporter tried to tell a woman how she could have avoided being raped, but as far as I am aware did not tell the accused rapist how he could have avoided committing rape. The events in the novel are not that bad. But I can't feel comfortable with the disproportionate and unrepresentative discussion of this issue which the novel presents</spoiler>.
For most people who can really empathize with Mori, and I suspect particularly those who are a similar age, this book deserves a five star review. However, differing on <i>The Lord of the Rings</i> (although feeling largely similar about <i>[book:The Inverted World|142181]</i>), being a materialist atheist who largely won't process the magical, and not having read much SF when I was quite that young, I can only give it four stars for being an enjoyable read with someone I think I would like to have around.
In Jo Walton's Hugo and Nebula award-winning novel Among Others, however, it's almost the other way round. Teenage narrator Mori comes from a family of witches and has spent her childhood talking to fairies with her twin sister in the Welsh valleys. But at the start of the novel, recently bereaved and estranged from her terrifying mother, Mori finds herself in the care of a father she's never met and sent to an English boarding school where magic is in decidedly short supply.
If this makes Among Others sound like a cutesy, comic children's book, don't be fooled. It's aimed at adults (although I imagine many teenagers would thoroughly enjoy it) and although it is indeed funny in places, its overall tone is wistful and occasionally very sad, although there's a pleasing undercurrent of hope throughout. Obsessed with fantasy and sci-fi novels and academically gifted, but with an eccentric perspective that makes her awkward among her peers, it's hard not to love Mori as she narrates her story through a series of diary entries, even when her decisions are dubious.
And yet, the thing that I enjoyed most about Among Others is something I haven't really seen any reference to yet in any other reader reviews (I haven't read any reviews by professional critics yet) - which is that it's very hard to say whether Mori really is magical at all. As she explains herself, magic makes things happen by causing 'chains of coincidence'. In Mori's magical world, a spell to destroy a factory doesn't make it disappear in a puff of smoke, it simply closes down for reasons of economy, so it's impossible to tell whether things happen by magic or just ... happen. Her hated mother, supposedly a wicked witch bent on something akin to world domination, sometimes seems more akin to an abusive, violent woman, possibly with a mental illness and certainly highly manipulative, and when we learn exactly how the accident occurred that has killed Mori's twin and left Mori disabled by a horrific leg injury as the two were running away, it seems hard to suggest that magic had anything to do with it.
Mori's love of science-fiction and fantasy literature is obsessive, meaning the novel is crammed with references to books and authors of the genre which shape Mori's relationship with her father and almost everyone else who becomes important to her, and it's both a comfort blanket and an escape for a confused, traumatised child. Could it be that the only way she can cope psychologically with her situation - abuse at the hands of her mother, the loss of her identical twin ('the better half of us'), a stint in a children's home (the horrors of which are only ever hinted at), a new and painful disability and life at a mediocre boarding school rife with bullies and a disturbing lack of privacy - is to frame it in a fantasy that somehow makes sense of it? Or is she a genuine 'good witch' whose open-mindedness and unique perspective really does help her to see the fairies and the sense the magic that others can't?
Mori is certain that 'it would be insane' of her to stop believing in fairies. Is this because it's insane to deny what she can plainly see, or is it that she would go insane if she didn't have the fantasy of magic to cling to? Are we to believe her or not when she assures us 'I can tell the difference [between fiction and reality], really I can'?
Personally, I never quite made up my mind, but regardless of what Mori is and why she's different, I loved her from the very first page. Her lack of self-pity, her affectionate fondness for her eccentric extended family, her kindness, her occasional naivete, her incredible resilience, her genuine determination to forge some sort of future for herself after her life has been ripped apart and her unique narrative voice all make Mori one of the most appealing teenage characters since I Capture The Castle's Cassandra Mortmain, so much so that I almost wished I was 15 again and attending Mori's ghastly boarding school so we could be friends.
The detail and frequency of the sci-fi literature references may irritate some readers, and this is not a book to read if you're looking for an eventful plot or fast-moving action; it has neither of those things. It does, however, have a certain beauty about it - a certain magic - that drew me in and kept me utterly captivated to the end.







