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Sea Songs and Tragic Romances: 13 Selkie Stories

We’ve always been suckers for good stories of the sea, and myths of selkies have inspired tales for centuries. Ethereal creatures who take the form of seals in the ocean, selkies transform into supernaturally beautiful humans while on land. Their stories tend to be romantic tragedies: female selkies are trapped on land and slowly waste away when human men hide their sealskins and claim the women as brides; many years later, the fishermen wake to find their beloved wives gone back to the sea, their selkie children spirited away to an aquatic life.

Of course, no two selkie stories are exactly alike. From modern fairytales to supernatural mysteries to distant ocean planetary adventures, we’ve gathered up a few of our favorites below—add your own in the comments!

The Secret of Roan Inish (1994)

This classic ’90s film combines every element of the classic selkie story. Wistful Irish kid? Check. People living on a misty, faraway island? Check. Sad family backstory? Checkity Check! Fiona goes to live with her grandparents on the western coast of Ireland, and soon learns that one of her ancestors may have had a tryst with a selkie. As if that weren’t magical enough, at least a few members of her community think that her baby brother was spirited away by the creatures. When she visits a lonely cove and spots an unusual seal, she needs to decide whether to trust the myths. Could it be her brother?

Anne McCaffrey and Elizabeth Ann Scarborough’s Petaybee Series

Selkies! In! Spaaaaaaaace! The first trilogy in the series centers on Major Yana Maddock, a spy sent to the glacial planet Petaybee. There she meets geneticist Sean Shongili, a selkie who uses his shapeshifting ability to transform into a seal and explore under-ocean caves on the relatively recently terraformed planet. Together they discover that the planet is sentient, and work to defend it from corporate exploitation.

A second trilogy features Shongili’s two children, who also have traits of selkies. Like their father, each can transform into a seal and converse telepathically with the planet’s creatures—but when a visiting scientist becomes obsessed with capturing the twins for study, Shongili sends them away to live in an orbiting space station.

Sofia Samatar’s “Selkie Stories are for Losers

I hate selkie stories. They’re always about how you went up to the attic to look for a book, and you found a disgusting old coat and brought it downstairs between finger and thumb and said “What’s this?”, and you never saw your mom again.

Sofia Samatar’s touching story tells us of a different side of the selkie myth. Our narrator is the daughter of a selkie who has to stay behind and take care of her father, while also dealing with the emotional fallout of not only losing her mother, but of being tied so tightly to the world of myth.

Margo Lanagan’s The Brides of Rollrock Island

On remote Rollrock Island, men go to sea to make their livings—and to catch their wives. Down on the windswept beach, the outcast sea witch Misskaella knows the way of drawing a girl from the heart of a seal—girls with long, pale limbs and faces of haunting innocence and loveliness. And for a price a man may buy himself a lovely sea-wife. He may have and hold and keep her. But magic always has its price, and the witch will have her true payment…

Ondine (2009)

Director Neil Jordan, who dealt with semi-magical horses in Into the West, gives us a semi-magical Selkie story in Ondine. If you’re unfamiliar with Neil Jordan, brace yourselves for the full onslaught of Irish cinema we’re about to unleash: Colin Farrell is a recovering alcoholic fisherman, his daughter is slowly dying of kidney failure and has to use a wheelchair, and her mom, Farrell’s ex, is an active alcoholic who keeps messing up their lives. One day Farrell pulls a half-drowned woman up in his fishing nets, and when she asks him not to take her to the hospital, he decides that’s not suspicious at all and takes her home. Soon he notices that when she sings he catches more fish, and he and his daughter come to care about her… maybe even love her? Obviously, things get complicated, but Ondine is an often lovely modern fairy tale, and a great addition to Neil Jordan’s particular brand of ethereal Irish cinema.

Mercedes Lackey’s Home From the Sea

The eighth book in Mercedes Lackey’s Elemental Masters Series takes us into the world of the selkies. Mari Prothero lives with her father in a fishing village on the coast of Wales. She’s approaching her eighteenth birthday, and she knows that soon she’ll be expected to marry a stranger of her family’s choosing. She hates the idea of this future, but she doesn’t yet know the truth: she is a descendant of selkies—and to continue her line, she must marry into that magical world.

Song of the Sea (2014)

Two children, Ben and Saoirse, live in a lighthouse with their father, Conor. The loss of their mother has shattered the family, and Conor remains inconsolable. Ben is often left to care for Saoirse, who hasn’t spoken even though she’s six years old. When Saoirse discovers a shell flute that used to belong to their mother, the spellbinding music she creates becomes both a means of communication and the key to a magical secret locked deep in their mother’s past. Saoirse and Ben team up to save their family—along the way, she’ll need to find her voice, and he must to overcome his deepest fears.

John Allison’s Bad Machinery: The Case of the Fire Inside

Bad Machinery tells the stories of three schoolgirl sleuths and three schoolboy investigators attending Griswalds Grammar School in the fictional West Yorkshire town of Tackleford, England. The mystery-solving teens tackle a number of supernatural cases, and in “The Case of the Fire Inside” one of the boys finds himself accidentally in possession of a selkie pelt. In her human form, the selkie takes refuge with a kindly (and slightly senile) old woman who calls her Ellen, mistaking the girl for her own daughter. “Ellen” tries to hide her mythical heritage at school, but her superhuman swimming prowess and inability to read or write might attract unwanted attention…

Selkie (2000)

This sweet family movie changes the usual story up by transplanting the Celtic legend to Australia. Jamie has a great life: a decent job, a place on the footy team, and best of all, he spends his nights playing lead guitar in a band. Everything’s going swell until his mom lands her dream job. She’s going to be the head of a marine research base, and the whole family has to move to a remote island. Jamie can’t ask her to turn her back on her dream, but what about his life? But all of his every day problems fade into the background once they’re on the island, because he begins to learn the truth about himself. The funny webbing between his fingers? The uncanny pull of the sea? Could he be a selkie?

Susan Cooper’s Seaward

Cally and West come from different countries and speak different languages. When tragedy took their parents, they were wrenched into a strange new reality, where they must work together to complete a quest: they must reach the sea. Their perilous journey takes them through lands both wondrous and terrifying, but they learn to survive and to love. Along the way they encounter giant insects, living darkness, dragons, and even selkies, until they finally learn the truth of their journey together.

Laurie Brooks’ Selkie Girl

Elin Jean has always known she was different from the others on their remote island home, and it’s just a matter of time until she discovers why: her mother, Margaret, is a selkie, held captive by her smitten father, who has kept Margaret’s precious seal pelt hostage for 16 years. Soon Elin Jean faces a choice about whether to free her mother from her island prison. And, as the child of this unusual union, she must make another decision. Part land, part sea, she must explore both worlds and dig deep inside herself to figure out where she belongs, and where her future lies.

The Seventh Stream (2001)

As in most selkie stories, the creature’s pelt is stolen and hidden away, and the selkie woman is trapped on land. But instead of forcing her to become his bride, her captor sees her as a means to wealth and power—her magic makes him a successful fisherman, and she is bound to his will so long as he has her sealskin. When she falls in love with another man—a widowed fisherman with the soul of a poet—they work together to thwart her captor. But there’s tragedy in the selkie’s magic: she can only come ashore in human form during a nine-day period of high tides known as “the seventh stream.” She can live on land for a while, but she must return to the sea before the next seventh stream. To choose otherwise means her death—what’s a selkie in love to do?

Catherynne M. Valente’s “The Tale of the Skin”

“The Tale of the Skin,” included in The Orphans Tales: In the Night Garden tells the rare story of a male selkie. Maybe even more rare, there’s a female satyr! The satyr in question is a young girl named Eshkol who visits a skin peddler and is enamored of a dull grey pelt. After she buys it, she learns that it draws its handsome male owner to her. Knowing the rules of fairy tales, she asks, “If you are a Selkie, and I have your skin, that means you must stay with me and be my lover until you can get the skin back, doesn’t it?” He admits the truth, but then spins the tale of how he came to lose his skin. Will she keep it to win his unwilling love?


We know there are almost as many selkie stories as there are fish in the sea—tell us your favorite in the comments! icon-paragraph-end

An earlier version of this article was published in February 2015.

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