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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
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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
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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
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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 Godâs 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.
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!
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Faith statement
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Topics: Craft
Rearranging Icons 7: Coming Full-Circle
The harder we try to make this icon metaphor fit into the practical business of writing and understanding literature, the squishier and messier it becomes.
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Fred Warren
Rearranging Icons 6: Images Of Man
Just as Christ wants us, His âicons,â to exalt the Father and be one with Him as He and the Father are One, so we may want to âexaltâ iconic characters who reflect us. Which iconic characters are your favorites, and why?
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E. Stephen Burnett
Rearranging Icons 5: In The Eye Of The Beholder
Iâm more interested in the idea that readers can have a richer reading experience and writers can tell richer, deeper stories if they understand how this works.
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Fred Warren
Rearranging Icons 4: Characters Becoming Icons
For every Christian, icons are inevitable. But they must show a process of redemption. Christ the âIconâ of the Father underwent suffering. So should we, as we image Him, and so should art and story characters, which image us.
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E. Stephen Burnett
Rearranging Icons 3: Give and Take
As our e-mail conversation about icons continued, we moved into more of a give-and-take format, so you’ll see lots of quoting and commenting on things we posted last week.
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Fred Warren
Rearranging Icons 2: Defining The Debates
What are icons? How have Christians viewed them in Church history, speculative stories, and evangelical art? If you think you or your denomination doesn’t deal with icons, in fiction or in faith practice, think again â and join our conversation.
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E. Stephen Burnett
Rearranging Icons: An Introduction
A few months ago, Stephen and I wandered into a conversation about the meaning of icons in literature and their connection to Christian faith, and we agreed it was a topic worth examining in more detail in a feature here at Speculative Faith.
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Fred Warren
Must Good Characters Be Likeable?
For a good story, must its central character be likeable, or only sympathetic? For Christian stories, that dilemma is more pronounced, because many authors focus on sympathetic non-Christians, rather than more-likeable Christian characters.
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E. Stephen Burnett
Spec-Faith Flashback: Jill Williamson
From our archives: Author Jill Williamson recalls how she actually wrote her YA sci-fi novel “Replication” before her fantasy “Blood of Kings” series.
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Jill Williamson
Sex In The Story 6: Heroes and Heroines
Amidst belching sitcom dads, raging feminists, over-angsty teen-boy âchosen ones,â or inhuman âwarrior princesses,â we find God-glorifying men and women in many stories. Here are a few.
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E. Stephen Burnett
Sex In The Story 5: More Male Mythologies
We may always have sex caricatures in stories, and they may balance each other out. But how do we cure stock males, gender-neutrals, bad boys, men-children, faith-based supermen, and Prophesied Heroes�
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E. Stephen Burnett
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
Sex In The Story 3: Trans-Gender Issues
âThe Church is too feministic!â âThe Church is too chauvinistic!â Either extreme will affect our real-life thinking, and will infect Christian storiesâ characters, replacing them with caricature-icons.
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E. Stephen Burnett
Dark Is The Stain: The Song & Dance
Jesus was frustrated because whether he calls his people in a spirit of celebration or comes weeping, they reject him. Christian storytellers can likely relate, when despite their efforts and pleas, they can’t please the audience.
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Kaci Hill
Advice From “The Story Of My Heart” Part II
So it seems that I stirred up a little bit of discussion two weeks ago with my odd little pyramid based on something I learned from the “story of my heart,” a tale of aliens searching for grace that I […]
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John Otte
Readers And Writers
Special thanks to all those who participated in Spec Faith’s Shredding, Round Two. I couldn’t help but think as I read through what everyone had to say, how vital it is for writers to hear from readers, not just other writers.
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Rebecca LuElla Miller
Genesis Of A Winning Novel
With the 2012 ACFW Genesis Contest now open (until March 2) for unpublished novelists, Matt Jones, winner of last year’s contest for best speculative novel, shares his experience.
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Matt Jones
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