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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
Realm Makers Brings Christian Fantastical Storytellers to Tennessee Events This Spring
Bestsellers meet fans at May 2–4 homeschool event and May 31–June 1 RiseUp Con.
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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
Realm Makers Brings Christian Fantastical Storytellers to Tennessee Events This Spring
Bestsellers meet fans at May 2–4 homeschool event and May 31–June 1 RiseUp Con.
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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
Realm Makers Brings Christian Fantastical Storytellers to Tennessee Events This Spring
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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
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Lorehaven helps fans of all ages explore fantastical stories for God’s glory.
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Names: fantasy
Fairytales … Truer Than Real Life?
Fairytales promote a desire for . . . other. Not a desire for fire-breathing dragons to terrorize your city block, or a desire for fantastical battles to happen on your front lawn, but a desire for “something beyond.”
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Rebecca LuElla Miller
Once Upon A Time In Wonderland – A Review
When ABC advertised their new TV program Once Upon A Time In Wonderland with the tag line “Not the Alice you thought you knew,” I almost passed. How glad I am that I decided to watch it instead.
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Rebecca LuElla Miller
The Undefined Unity Of Speculative Fiction
On the surface speculative fiction seems fractured into a thousand pieces, which undoubtedly explains the numerous small enclaves of speculative writers and fans that exist in cyberspace.
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Rebecca LuElla Miller
What Makes Fantasy Work? Part 1
Readers love Narnia and Lord of the Rings, and they love a handful of later fantasies. But a lot of stories don’t go viral, don’t get hundreds of reviews, and in fact get tepid responses. So what makes fantasy work?
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Rebecca LuElla Miller
Seeking A Better Country Than Middle Earth
Watching Peter Jackson interpret J.R.R. Tolkien is like watching a master jazz impresario play Beethoven. The original is classic; the interpretation as a new work is equally brilliant.
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Rebecca LuElla Miller
What Constitutes “Derivative”?
Some scholars claim J. R. R. Tolkien owed a debt of influence where he claimed none. I find this criticism to be thoroughly ironic because the great accusation against writers of high fantasy today is that their work is derivative, a mere shadow of, you guessed it, J.R.R. Tolkien.
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Rebecca LuElla Miller
The Fine Line Between Reality and Fantasy
When I started writing my recently released young adult novel, Fathom, I knew there would be otherworldly creatures involved and that they would play a big part in the story. However, I always felt that at its heart, Fathom was a contemporary story
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Merrie Destefano
The Success Of Fantasy By The Masters
According to Dr. Drout, Tolkien, and I would argue Lewis, created a bridge for contemporary readers to step into the realm of the fantastic. These writers tied their magical, mystical worlds to the world readers knew and recognized. Interestingly, they did so in vastly different ways.
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Rebecca LuElla Miller
Oz Four Ways: Wicked, The Musical
See and hear the Merry Old Land at its very best in our carefree Musical Tour of Oz!
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Fred Warren
Why Aren’t Adults More Inclined To Read Fantasy?
George MacDonald, a contemporary and friend of Lewis Carroll and Mark Twain, wrote fairy tales not only for children, but also for adults, and surprisingly, from our 21st century context, his work sold in the thousands of copies throughout Europe and also here in the U.S.
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Dean Hardy
The Appeal Of Fantasy For Young Adults
Of all the unexpected things in contemporary literature, this is among the oddest: that kids have an inordinate appetite for very long, very tricky, very strange books about places that don’t exist, fights that never happened, all set against the sort of medieval background that Mark Twain thought he had discredited with “A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur’s Court.” (excerpt from “The Dragon’s Egg”)
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Rebecca LuElla Miller
Introducing N. D. Wilson
Publishing as N. D. Wilson, Nate writes middle grade fantasy for the general market, including the well-loved Cupboards Trilogy. His most recent release is the much acclaimed The Dragon’s Tooth, first in the Ashtown Burials series, which received starred reviews from Publisher’s Weekly, Booklist, and School Library Journal. The paperback edition is due out next month.
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Rebecca LuElla Miller
Fantasy: Where To Go Next?
You want to introduce a friend of yours to fantasy. Where do you start? That seems like a no-brainer. Start with the best — Lewis and Tolkien. But then what? What if this particular friend of yours says, I love this fantasy stuff you’ve given me. Love, love, love them. What should I read next? What do you say?
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Rebecca LuElla Miller
Fantasy And Overt Christianity
Should Christian writers refrain from having their characters do what Christians do — turn to Christ, pray for help, give spiritual counsel, worship with other believers, and so on? If Christians do want to show their characters acting like Christians, should their books then be confined to Christian circles? Should we indeed write for and market to Christians only?
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Rebecca LuElla Miller
Bringing The Personal To The Universal
Great fiction is made up of themes: Love and longing, coming of age, voyage and return, fathers, sons, daughters, mothers, overcoming the monster, death, birth, and more. These are universals, themes that can be, on one level or another, understood by any man or woman.
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Anne Elisabeth Stengl
Jack And John In Conversation
In lieu of our planned article, then, I offer you a fascinating dramatization of a dialogue between C. S. Lewis and J. R. R. Tolkien, with thanks to Fred Warren who found it and passed it along to me because of its relevance to the just concluded series on Tolkien’s essay “On Fairy-Stories.” Enjoy!
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Rebecca LuElla Miller
The Making Of A Myth, Part 7 – Tolkien And The Gospel
Few people, even those not well-versed in fantasy, will argue against the idea that J. R. R. Tolkien is the master of the fantasy genre. In that he wrote his thoughts about this type of tale in his essay “On […]
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Rebecca LuElla Miller
The Making Of A Myth, Part 6 — Tolkien On Romance
Would J. R. R. Tolkien, if he were alive today, be a fan of prairie romance? The question is appropriate because of what he wrote in his essay “On Fairy-Stories” regarding escapism.
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Rebecca LuElla Miller
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