"In this comprehensive and fascinating study of urban fantasy, Stefan Ekman shows how the genre emerged as one of the major expressions of modernity. Like cyberpunk fiction or the hard-boiled detective novel, urban fantasies reveal the disruptions and distractions of contemporary life while also offering glimpses of utopian possibility."— Brian Attebery, Author of Fantasy: How It Works
"Stefan Ekman’s long-awaited book on Urban Fantasy proves to have been well worth the wait. With characteristic clarity and precision he presents us with his findings on the genre: for Ekman, urban fantasy brings fantastic or supernatural tropes into direct engagement with the modern (a concept he helpfully explains), giving special attention to the unseen, from marginalised communities and neglected spaces to authoritarian secret societies, criminal organizations and hidden parallel worlds. In the process, it returns repeatedly to ‘social commentary’, a focus on the politics of living among the ever-changing contradictions of modernity. After tracing the history of the genre through a range of ‘pre-urban fantasies’, Ekman demonstrates how it has gone on to transform itself through the decades by braiding into these core concerns a series of new narrative threads from other genres, each tailored to the needs and obsessions of a new generation. This ongoing process of braiding explains why there are so many different opinions current about what constitutes urban fantasy. In his coda Ekman offers a ‘short answer’ to this question; but his book presents us with a rich abundance of terms, ideas, and further questions which fans and scholars will be debating for years to come. In doing so it makes a major contribution to the field of fantasy studies."— Rob Maslen, Honorary Senior Research Fellow, Centre for Fantasy and the Fantastic, University of Glasgow
“In this fascinating and original book, Stefan Ekman compellingly argues that urban fantasy is a genre in its own right. The impressive breadth of fiction considered in the book is matched by in-depth case studies to develop this innovative argument and show that the genre is deeply concerned with the conditions of modernity. This book is a must-have for anyone interested in studies of fantasy and/or literatures of modernity.”— Helen Young, Senior Research Fellow in Literary Studies, Deakin University
"Ekman writes with a clarity and directness that remains too uncommon in academic studies, and while he cites an impressive array of scholarship going back decades, he rather wisely segregates his more theoretical arguments into separate chapters explaining with admirable precision exactly what he means by modernity, or how specific protocols like focalization are informing his discussions of fiction...[Urban Fantasy] gives us a very useful framework for the arguments we are going to have anyway."— Gary K. Wolfe, Locus Magazine