Fairy tales transport acts of human cruelty and suffering into magical worlds where the unjust are punished and the innocent are redeemed. In Tender Morsels, Lanagan narrates a story of human cruelty and survival in an old world setting; fairy tale magic blended with real-world wisdom.
In the magic world of protagonist Liga, her heart’s desire projects safety and innocence that supplies her iwth marketable skills and a loving home for her daughters. Yet, it is precisely this unnatural life within a sheltered world, that prevents Liga’s ability to gain wisdom. Wisdom is of the real world and it can only be obtained through living and learning through both its cruelty and its joyful experiences.
Lanagan borrows old-world colloquialisms and several elements from the fairy tale, Rose Red and Snow White. The bears, who befriend Liga and her daughters, represent humans, with their natural instincts of both tenderness and violence. As Liga’s magic world begins to suffer intrusions from the real world, the division between symbolism and realism blurs, building to the climactic moment when Liga’s daughter, Urdda, and much later, elder daughter, Branza, followed by Liga, are thrust back into the world from which Liga escaped.
Lanagan’s main characters are richly developed through inner dialogue and facing challenging circumstances. Good ultimately overcomes evil, but not before resilience and love have been tested. Evil, as represented by incest, rape, lust, greed and belittlement is an inherent part of the real world and it is only through the existence of evil, that love, charity and acts of goodness have real meaning. A world without evil is hollow and cannot return the full force of love. Passion enables good to be more powerful, while society and culture act together to tame violence and cruelty, Liga cannot live outside the real world, nor in a world apart from a community of people without limiting her own life.