Skip to content

Fairytale Rape: Robin McKinley’s Deerskin

24
Share

Fairytale Rape: Robin McKinley’s Deerskin

Home / Fairytale Rape: Robin McKinley’s Deerskin
Blog written word

Fairytale Rape: Robin McKinley’s Deerskin

By

Published on January 24, 2009

24
Share

People sometimes ask me if there’s anything I wish I’d written. Of course, there are whole libraries of books I wish I’d written, from The Iliad onwards, but the only book I’ve ever felt that I would have written exactly the way it is is Robin McKinley’s Deerskin. Yes, it’s a dark and disturbing fairytale retelling about rape and recovery, and I wouldn’t change a word of it. It’s not an easy book. But it is an important one.

I said in my Hero and the Crown post that it’s possible to see McKinley’s whole career is telling fairytales as if they happened to real people and had consequences. Deerskin takes that to new dimensions. One of the things fantasy can do best is to tell a mythic story that is simultaneously an immediate and distinctly personal story. Deerskin does this and holds the hard balance astonishingly well.

A lot of McKinley is, or could be, YA. This one is definitely a book for grown-ups. McKinley doesn’t pull any punches at all. Deerskin begins with a child being told her parents’ happily-ever-after story. The words are those of fairytales—nobody has names, it is the King, the Queen, the Princess. And the princess (whose name, we later learn, is Lissar), is born into the ever after. She is neglected and unloved because her parents have eyes only for each other. Her mother is the most beautiful woman in seven kingdoms, and when she loses a little of that legendary beauty she dies. And as she dies she makes her husband promise not to marry anyone less beautiful than she was—and you can see that this isn’t going anywhere good. But as well as the story of the incestous rape, it’s the story of recovery. And both are on a mythic scale, as well as a personal scale. Her father is a monster, and yet he is also a confused man. And Lissar is damaged but healed by a goddess to give her time to make her own healing. That healing isn’t easy, and the scene where she denounces her father is almost as hard to read as the rape scene, but it’s an amazing achievement.

There are plenty of books in which a heroine is raped. But there are surprisingly few genre books in which rape is the subject. I don’t think this is a bad thing. It’s a very difficult subject to write about. It’s amazing that McKinley makes it work. It’s not the only thing in the book, of course. When my son’s girlfriend saw the beautiful Canty cover and asked what it was about, my immediate response was “Dogs.” This was only partly cowardice. It is a book about dogs. Lissar is given a puppy, Ash, and she becomes human in loving Ash and being loved by her. Then later a good part of her recovery comes about working in kennels and saving the lives of motherless puppies. The dog bits are extremely well done. The dogs are like dogs—McKinley’s always good at animals. And it’s a book about different ways of running a fairytale kingdom—the economics are a lot more realistic than in most fantasy of this type. As usual the details are wonderful and entirely convincing—I entirely believe the part about living in a hut in the snow and wishing for two buckets instead of just one. It’s just right. The magic is everyday and domestic, too—Lissar can find lost children, and the Goddess heals her. She’s a very interesting goddess, too, one who chooses to spend her magic helping people instead of saving it up to be a greater goddess.

The only part of it that doesn’t work for me is the romance. Romances are never McKinley’s strong point. She has written two different novel-length versions of the fairytale “Beauty and the Beast,” Beauty and Rose Daughter, and sometimes it seems to me as if that’s the only romantic story she believes in—the girl who falls in love with the man who at first seems like an enemy. Ossin here isn’t quite that, but while I believe that Lissar in some way loves him I don’t understand why—and this is the same with Luthe, and Tor, and all the heroes who aren’t in some way beasts. Odd.

I think this is an important book not just because it’s tackling a generally difficult subject and doing it well, but because it takes the darkness that is at the heart of fairytales and doesn’t flinch away from dealing with it. People ask why, in this day and age, we tell fairytales, and it’s because they express universal truths, in a metaphorical way. We all know these stories, they’re part of Western culture. They often get prettified and Disneyfied, and they’re more than that, they’re darker and older and connect to deeper parts of people. People also ask, why are we talking about kings and queens and princesses. The answer to that is sometimes that it’s a magnified way of talking about families. Fairy tales are about families, about growing up, about love, about danger, about being a child and being a parent. This one is about a dysfunctional family, in a dysfunctional kingdom, but McKinley balances that with a functional family in a functional kingdom, and links the two with the love of a dog. It’s brave of her to tell a story like this one and make it real.

About the Author

Jo Walton

Author

Jo Walton is the author of fifteen novels, including the Hugo and Nebula award winning Among Others two essay collections, a collection of short stories, and several poetry collections. She has a new essay collection Trace Elements, with Ada Palmer, coming soon. She has a Patreon (patreon.com/bluejo) for her poetry, and the fact that people support it constantly restores her faith in human nature. She lives in Montreal, Canada, and Florence, Italy, reads a lot, and blogs about it here. It sometimes worries her that this is so exactly what she wanted to do when she grew up.
Learn More About Jo
Subscribe
Notify of
Avatar


24 Comments
Oldest
Newest Most Voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Avatar
16 years ago

The scene in which Lissar finally confronts her father is one of my favorite scenes in all of fantasy literature. So dark, so powerful.

Avatar
sef
16 years ago

Deerskin is the reason I read McKinley. Which is good, because it lead to me reading [I]Sunshine[/I]. Both of which are books that I buy every couple of years to replace the copy I’d lent out or misplaced. (The result being I think I have five copies of [I]Deerskin[/i] at this point.)

Avatar
Diatryma
16 years ago

I agree with you on Beauty and the Beast. McKinley uses it as a crutch in many ways. Parts of Chalice were very similar to Beauty in that way. I like B&B too, but I’d really like to see something else.

Avatar
V47
16 years ago

You’re making me wonder if this book will grab me by the insides the way Bear Daughter did. And I hate romances yet am willing to brave it to investigate. Nice review.

katenepveu
16 years ago

Huh. What about the romance in _Spindle’s End_?

(As-you-know-Jo, I disagree about the balance of realism and fairy-tale in this book, but I agree that it’s got some very powerful bits.)

katenepveu
16 years ago

Two or three, even, depending on how you count.

Avatar
16 years ago

I’d call it two romances and a marriage.

Avatar
Mary Frances
16 years ago

I’m not going to re-read Deerskin; that book gave me cold chills, and I don’t need that right now. But one thing occurred to me, re: the discussion of McKinley and romance–she seems to me to write her most believable love stories when the hero is damaged and needs rescuing by the female protagonist-heroine. Don’t know if that’s a pattern, really, but it might relate to the echoes of Beauty and the Beast in Chalice.

Avatar
aspiring
16 years ago

I loved Deerskin. I reread it recently and it was just as good as I remembered. I didn’t mind the oddness of the romance-or-whatever it ended up being, but I thought that it had more to do with its secondary nature – that the romance was secondary to the core subject, or the core story of Lissar’s return to the human world. Of Mckinley’s other works I have only read Spindle’s End, but have never felt the urge to reread it as I have Deerskin.

Avatar
16 years ago

Has anyone read Daughter of the Forest, by Juliet Marillier? It’s also a retelling of a fairytale (the Seven Swans), and is also the story of a girl recovering from rape (while trying to focus on spinning shirts from nettle.)

It also has a deeply weird romance, that sort of pops out of the woodwork after she finishes her brother’s shirts.

Avatar
overtheseatoskye
16 years ago

I’ve been meaning to read this for a while now – thanks for reminding me! I found the romance in “Sunshine” pretty compelling, but was frustrated by the coy ending – it seemed like a failure of nerve.

Avatar
16 years ago

Because I’m a fiber geek: I recently found out that it’s really possible to spin yarn from some kinds of nettle.

Avatar
Mary Frances
16 years ago

TexAnne, I’m not a fiber geek, but I’ve learned over the years that it’s possible to spin yarn or thread out of just about anything. Have you read Bujold’s Sharing Knife series (the subject of another of Jo’s review threads)? Because if you haven’t, Book Two has an awful lot to say about fiber magic.

Bujold has also recommended a book called Women’s Work: The First 20,000 Years by Elizabeth Wayland Barber. Not my field, so I can’t really judge it, but I did find it fascinating. Do you know it?

And now, back to our regularly scheduled thread . . . sorry.

Avatar
16 years ago

Mary Frances, the Sharing Knife books are on my to-be-read pile, and I don’t know the Barber. Thanks for the tip!

Avatar
Intertext
16 years ago

Thank you for such a lovely tribute to one of my all time favourite books. I even like the romance in this one :)

Avatar
Beth Caron
14 years ago

Thank you for your post about Deerskin. It is such a lyrical read. Both challenging and beautiful at the same time. I agree with you about the romance aspect of the book, although I felt their connection was depicted in their common love of dogs. I believe that the dogs symbolized innocence, healing, love and much more.
Can you recommend any books along the lines of Deerskin?
I also suggest The Foretelling, by Alice Hoffman for a good read that has a fairy tale quality and is a beautiful read that is also fable-like.

Avatar
Storycat
7 years ago

Funny, I thought Deerskin had a very realistic romance, just not a fairy tale romance. One damaged but kind person and one immature but also kind person, basically meeting at work and over time growing to deeply appreciate each other’s kindness and strengths. Their interactions were *normal* rather than mythic in scope; they realized how much they loved each other in the absences where they missed being with each other, instead of seeing each other once and knowing “Ah, here is my True Love.” I really loved the relationship, even to the somewhat tenuously hopeful ending.

Avatar
Ashzera
6 years ago

Thanks for the review! I just finished reading this book again and still find it deeply moving, comforting and beautiful.

, I agree that the romance was realistic and also relatable. I liked that it was two people slowly falling in love for small, ordinary reasons.

Of course Lissar’s relationship with Ash is different and more intense at times, which I suppose often overshadows her relationships with Ossin. But I think it’s only a natural consequence of Lissar knowing Ash for much longer than she has known Ossin, and also that they have a shared history. 

Avatar
NT
3 years ago

I just read Deerskin for the first time and I actually found the romance very compelling (whereas the romance in The Hero and the Crown felt phoned-in to the point of infuriating). It might have helped that I saw a lot of myself in Ossin, but it felt like a completely believable portrayal of two people bonding over shared interests and values.

Avatar
Ria
3 years ago

If you liked the confrontation scene, you might also like the book The Black Swan by Mercedes Lackey. There’s also, amongst the other elements of the story (based on the Swan Princess), the part where the titular black swan character (who is not the swan princess, btw) has to face a similar realization of the damage her father has done to her, and refuses (despite her conflicted sorrow and attachment) to allow him to continue. Nicely (and rarely) enough, the story doesn’t immediately end there, but goes on a bit into the aftermath of trying to figure out how to start anew after rejecting an abusive parent’s influence / control over her entire life.

Avatar
Essay
2 years ago

Maybe I’m an outlier but I honestly found the relationship between Ossin and Lissar to be pretty believable? It’s very clear that they care deeply about one another and respect each other; we see the slow build of that through the story with how she and Ossin work to save the puppies and just how… comfortable they are with each other. While we see Lissar interact with others, it’s never quite as comfortable as when she’s with Ossin.

Which makes sense. As the book itself makes clear at various points, a lot of the others don’t see Lissar solely as Lissar (or Deerskin, when she presents herself as such). They see her as Moonwoman. And while Ossin admits that as a boy he’d been in love with the Moonwoman he’s also pretty clear in how he admits that to Lissar (and when he admits it to her; before he admits his feelings for her specifically and asks her to marry him) that he doesn’t see Lissar as being the Moonwoman. His love for her is independent of the love he once had for the Moonwoman, even if it forms into a similar shape.

And… at least to me, it makes sense that after such a violation as what Lissar went through, after how consistently she has been seen in ways she did not want to be seen – by her father, by her father’s ministers and courtiers, by the people who come to her for help and even by some of the others working in the kennels, who put her on a bit of a pedestal – Ossin is one of the few people to see her pretty clearly. As is commented in the book, it’s hard to think of someone as godly when you see them covered in puppy sick and waste, falling asleep from exhaustion – and that’s how Ossin sees her, and she him, when they’re saving the litter. They snap at each other and see each other struggle and acknowledge that the prince is a person and the mysterious possibly-magical woman is a person – and that they’re a person before and as much as they’re anything else.

What Lissar needs, I think and at least as I understand it, is someone who sees her clearly and accepts her as she is – unusual but not wholly fantastical, a human person and not a goddess, flawed and not perfect – and Ossin does. In the end, when she runs from him a second time, it’s not because of him so much as her own complicated feelings about what happened to her – even though she’s denounced her father and saved Ossin’s sister from that fate, that doesn’t resolve her own trauma. She’s still got things to work through.

And that’s why the end is so tentative, I think. It is a romance that could be, where both parties feel strongly and one has a lot of reason to be wary of intimacy, but it is a promise that it could be, even if it’s not wholly there yet.

At least for me, that worked very well and felt… right, for the story of trauma it was telling.