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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.
Subscribe free
 to
join our Guild for monthly book quests
!
Crew manifest
Faith statement
FAQs
All author resources
Lorehaven Guild
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SpecFaith
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Topics: Marketing
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
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With the 2012 ACFW Genesis Contest now open (until March 2) for unpublished novelists, Matt Jones, winner of last year’s contest for best speculative novel, shares his experience.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
Secrets Of The Pyramid Scheme
Do most Christian speculative readers enjoy those stories because of their intrinsic value? Or do the majority of readers enjoy such reading mainly because of their own hopes to climb the pyramid and write their own novels?
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E. Stephen Burnett
Lightning In A Bottle
I’m going to keep this simple today. What makes a bestseller? What makes you want to pick up a book, keep reading it, and then recommend it to your friends after you’ve finished it?
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Fred Warren
Stories For Christians 1: The New âwatchful Dragonsâ
C.S. Lewis wrote about âwatchful dragonsâ on guard against religious trappings that seem incompatible with enjoyment. But many Christians today employ different Churchian Dragons, who tolerate fiction (if they do) mainly if it plays well on their own moralist pragmatic grounds.
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E. Stephen Burnett
Why We Should Write Fiction For Christians, Part 2
Amidst the cries to emphasize only subtler Christian stories, let’s not forget that Christians also need to see themselves and their beliefs simulated as only fiction can, and that some in the Church are genuinely confused about stories and need novelists’ love.
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E. Stephen Burnett
Why We Should Write Fiction For Christians, Part 1
Many voices encourage Christian novelists to aim for secular audiences, and that is surely a worthy calling. Yet less frequently do we urge storytellers to explore the Gospel more directly in fiction that is by Christians, for Christians.
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E. Stephen Burnett
The Struggle: Whom Do You Trust?
Bruce Hennigan, author of “The 13th Demon,” explores the perils of self-publishing versus traditional publishing, with help from friend and fellow author A.S. Peterson, author of “The Fiddler’s Gun” and “The Fiddler’s Green.”
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Bruce Hennigan
Fans Or Community Or Personal Entourages
Recently I posted an open letter to readers of Christian fantasy over at Facebook. The article centers on what readers can do to promote the books they like with the ultimate goal to send a message to publishers to put […]
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Rebecca LuElla Miller
Hutchmoot: There and Back Again
Author Bruce Hennigan attended the new Hutchmoot last year, and interviews author A.S. Peterson about this year’s plans. “If you concentrate on telling the best story you can, you wonât be able to keep Christ out of it. He’ll show up.”
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Bruce Hennigan
A Long and Glorious Tradition
If you think speculative stories are (or should) only be a “niche” market, I have a few names: Dante. Bunyan. Visionary fiction’s patron saints, Lewis and Tolkien. Oh, and Psalty the Singing Songbook. Also introducing: the SF Library!
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E. Stephen Burnett
The Rowling
Once upon an evening weary, as my eyes grew red and bleary, Surfing âcross the net for news, an awful, tedious, dreadful chore Suddenly there came a pingingâan alarum gently ringing Some neglected RSS feed that Iâd never checked before…
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Fred Warren
Speculative Marketing: Re-imagining Reality
What if the world we call reality is all a big lie? What if we see the world, not as it really is, but the way we think it should be? Or even worse⌠what if we see it the […]
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John Olson
Space Opera, Sci-fi, SF or âskiffyâ?
Does the genre term “sci-fi” inevitably connote pulp stories, whose covers feature men wearing biceps and spacesuits, women wearing little, and horrifying invader robots wearing women? Or have perceptions been changing?
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E. Stephen Burnett
Speculative Stories Keep Coming
Supernatural stories on the little or big screen undoubtedly bode well for books. The two media seem inter-dependent. Some of the movies were born from previous print sources (books or comic books), and these movies will foster new works of a similar kind. The question is, where will the Christian writer fit into this explosion?
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Rebecca LuElla Miller
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