NEW!
Lorehaven helps fans of all ages explore fantastical stories for God’s glory.
Find the newest fiction
for
young readers
plus
teens+YA
and
adults
. Get
articles
and
podcasts
that engage the best Christian-made fantasy, sci-fi, and beyond.
Subscribe free
to
join our Guild for monthly book quests
!
Crew manifest
Faith statement
FAQs
All author resources
Lorehaven Guild
Subscribe for free
Tattoo of Crimson
Complex relationships and social conventions tangle in this unique world inspired by Regency England and the Inquisition era, but overlaid with fae creatures.
MIDDLE GRADE
Newest fantastical books we’ve found
Best for older children ages 8–12
boys’ fiction
·
girls’ fiction
·
all fiction
Lorehaven Guild
·
Book Quests
·
subscribe
Top resources
Try These Three Practical Questions to Discern Fictional Magic
How Do We Discern Good and Bad ‘Magic’?
Three Fantastical Christian Stories to Help Your Kids Head Back to School
The Death and Rebirth of Magic in Children's Fantasy
TEENS + YA
Newest fantastical books we’ve found
Best for readers ages 13–18—and beyond
young men’s
·
young women’s
·
all fiction
Lorehaven Guild
·
Book Quests
·
subscribe
Top resources
Beware the Real Danger of Entertainment
Christian-Made Fantasy Can Shine Light in the Grimdark
How to Disciple Your Kids with Dangeous Books
How Reading Epic Fantasy Helps Me Be Brave
Engaging Fictional Violence in Our Real Worlds
Engaging That @&*% Our Stories Often Say
ADULTS
Newest fantastical books we’ve found
Challenging novels for wise readers 18 and up.
men’s fiction
·
women’s fiction
·
all fiction
articles
·
podcast
·
reviews
·
subscribe
Top resources
Even If We Like Fantasy and Sci-Fi, We Can Still Practice Accidental Legalism
How God Uses Story Villains for Our Good
Sensual Scenes in Fiction Pose Unique Temptations for Women
Stories With Bad Ideas Can Still Help Us Grow
Engaging Fictional Violence in Our Real Worlds
Engaging That @&*% Our Stories Often Say
ONSCREEN
Film, streaming, TV, video games
Help your kids engage their world for Christ!
Explore
The Pop Culture Parent
Top resources
Let’s Not Excuse Movie and TV Porn For the Sake of ‘Redemptive’ Stories
Christians Can’t Consistently Blame Leftist Fiction While Pushing Our Own Propaganda
AUTHORS
Advertise at Lorehaven
List your own novel
Request a review
Lorehaven helps fans of all ages explore fantastical stories for God’s glory.
Find the newest fiction
for
young readers
plus
teens+YA
and
adults
. Get
articles
and
podcasts
that engage the best Christian-made fantasy, sci-fi, and beyond.
Subscribe free
to
join our Guild for monthly book quests
!
Crew manifest
Faith statement
FAQs
All author resources
Lorehaven Guild
Subscribe for free
Share your novel with new fans!
Lorehaven is reaching Christian fans, homeschool families, church influencers, and cultural conservatives.
Do Daily Wire Hosts Want to Tear Down Culture or Build It Up?
Which way, western man? Behind the Candace Owens/Ben Shapiro feud lies a deeper divide over the purpose of cultural conservatism.
·
E. Stephen Burnett
GIFTS
Find new gifts for Christian fans
Lorehaven print issues (2018–2020)
New!
Middle grade
Teens + YA
Adults
Onscreen
Authors
Gifts
Guild
articles
•
book quests
•
library
•
news
•
podcast
•
reviews
•
subscribe free
/
SpecFaith results for
theme
What’s The Difference In ‘Inspirational’ Stories?
Replace “follow your dreams by believing in yourself” with “follow your dreams by believing in Jesus”; does that make a story Christian?
·
E. Stephen Burnett
Seeing Truth Reflections In Light Of Scripture
If we enjoy natural wonders, works of art and fantastic God-honoring stories, does that mean we don’t believe Scripture is sufficient? Not at all. Instead we can love all these, not in place of God’s Word, but because they reflect its light.
·
E. Stephen Burnett
The Auralia Thread: Reflections on A Vast Expanse
I joined the Christian Science Fiction and Fantasy Blog Tour, run by our own fabulous Becky Miller, all the way back in January 2009. I missed my chance to read the first book, and the second book–Jeffrey Overstreet’s Cyndere’s Midnight–had […]
·
Rachel Starr Thomson
Overheard At The Agora
Time: 37 A.D, about three hours past dawn. Place: A village in the countryside, a few furlongs from Rome. Two friends meet in the marketplace…
·
Fred Warren
What Gives You Nightmares?
Last Friday, our guest blogger, author Wayne Thomas Batson, wrote about fantasy as a vehicle for soul searching. His remarks reminded me of what I read from Anne Rice when she announced her conversion (since revoked) to the Catholic faith. […]
·
Rebecca LuElla Miller
Guest Blog: Donita Paul
Donita Paul is the author of the popular DragonKeeper Chronicles and her current series, The Chiril Chronicles. In addition she has authored the children’s book The Dragon and the Turtle and the soon to be released The Dragon & the […]
·
Donita K. Paul
$#@£₣! My Christian Fiction Doesn’t Say, Part 1
Here I hope to represent and discuss both sides of the Fictitious Cussing debate, pros and cons, rebuttals for and against. Why? Because I’m still sorting through it all myself. And last year I thought a little differently than I do today.
·
E. Stephen Burnett
Refuting ‘universalism’ Slanders Of C.S. Lewis, Part 3
Lewis was not a universalist. He was not a closet compromising-with-Satan “pagan” either. He believed the essentials of the faith: that he was a sinner and that Christ, by grace, saved him. That, at the core, makes one a Christian.
·
E. Stephen Burnett
“Christian Speculative Fiction” Is Not An Oxymoron
In Friday’s guest post, “Is ‘Christian Speculative Fiction’ an Oxymoron?” debut novelist Mike Duran (if I “got” him correctly 😉 ) hypothesized that a Christian’s theology may get in the way of speculating about our world — that which is […]
·
Rebecca LuElla Miller
Can Christians Write Novels Without Evil?
Our choices are to accept the Bible as the authoritative, infallible, inerrant Word, including its violence, or not. I for one choose the former and think it is high time we quit making excuses for it.
·
Marc Schooley
Salvaging Scripture For Our Own Story Parts
If human authors’ intentions and genre guidelines are worth respect from readers, then surely God as Author, His intentions and reading Scripture rightly, are all worth even more. Yet some novels’ flagrant misuse of Scripture and Biblical concepts, using only scraps of it to fit sporadically into another story, is dubious.
·
E. Stephen Burnett
Know Your Audience
This week the CSFF Blog Tour is featuring Dragons of the Valley, book two in the Chiril Chronicles by Donita Paul, winner of the first Clive Staples Award. It struck me as I was reading this story that one of […]
·
Rebecca LuElla Miller
The Rise Of Steampunk
Ever been in one of those rare occasions when your job coincided with an alternate interest? That was me last week, seconds after I had name-dropped a certain term while interviewing someone for my day job. She was a bed-and-breakfast […]
·
E. Stephen Burnett
Fear, Festering and Faith: The Artist’s Contract With Honesty
Apologies for tardiness. I confess to being deathly ill, but that doesn’t usually stop me. This week, I was trying to find something honest to say, and nothing wanted to come out. The notion of faith and fictional speculation didn’t […]
·
C.L. Dyck
Fighting Man-Centered Monsters In Christian Fantasy
Stories like “The Voyage of the Dawn Treader” that make a Christ-figure a means to fulfilling one’s destiny are little better than atheism.
·
E. Stephen Burnett
Guest Blog: C. S. Lakin, Part 2
Fairy Tales As a Sub-genre of Fantasy, Part 2 by C. S. Lakin My introductory post discussed the power of fairy tales and the way fairy tale structure is different from other fantasy sub-genres. The key point is that the […]
·
C.S. Lakin
Pages:
«
1
...
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
»