NEW
‘On Magic and Miracles’ Trains Christians to Dispel Darkness and Discern Fantastic Stories
Christian skeptics of fantasy must reckon with the biblical wisdom spelled in Marian A. Jacobs’s nonfiction-about-fiction book.
— E. Stephen Burnett —
ABOUT
Who creates Lorehaven?
What do we believe?
More about Lorehaven
Join the Guild
Author resources
Get free resources
Lorehaven.com is
created by biblical Christian fans and storytellers
to explore fantastical stories for God’s glory.
Use our powerful book search
to find great Christian-made fantastical fiction for your family—sorting by
young readers
plus
teens+YA
and
adults
. Get
articles
and
podcasts
that go deeper into fantasy, sci-fi, and beyond.
Subscribe free
to get resources by email and
join the Guild
!
Facebook
Instagram
X
articles
book quests
library
podcast
reviews
gifts
print magazine (2018–2020)
Speculative Faith archive
BOOK QUESTS
Join the Lorehaven Guild for twice-monthly book quests
.
About the Guild
Faith statement
FAQs
LIBRARY
Newest fantastical books we’ve found
All novels
Add a novel
fantasy
·
sci-fi
·
and beyond
early readers
·
middle grade
·
teens + YA
·
adults
Search 1,425 listed novel titles and 345 reviews of the best Christian-made fantastical fiction
ONSCREEN
Film, streaming, TV, video games
Help your kids engage their world for Christ!
Explore
The Pop Culture Parent
PODCAST
Seek the Fantastical Truth podcast
Show archives
Listener feedback
All podcast sponsors
Sponsor the podcast
Subscribe to the show
‘On Magic and Miracles’ Trains Christians to Dispel Darkness and Discern Fantastic Stories
Christian skeptics of fantasy must reckon with the biblical wisdom spelled in Marian A. Jacobs’s nonfiction-about-fiction book.
REVIEWS
Find fantastical Christian reviews
All reviews
Request review
Christian skeptics of fantasy must reckon with the biblical wisdom spelled in Marian A. Jacobs’s nonfiction-about-fiction book.
— E. Stephen Burnett —
New
About
Book Quests
Library
Onscreen
Podcast
Reviews
/
Names: C. S. Lewis
sponsor Lorehaven
•
subscribe free!
subscribe free!
Speculative Faith Reading Group 3: Enter The Witch
For the real-life Speculative Faith Reading Group for LWW, this week we’ll pick up the pace. It helps that chapters 3 and 4 are short and follow one vital story development — Edmund meeting the White Witch.
— E. Stephen Burnett —
Speculative Faith Reading Group 4: Reality and Narnia
Why did C.S. Lewis write about four children coming into the magical land of Narnia? Why not two, or three, or even one, in order to write a simpler story with a more-focused cast of characters?
— E. Stephen Burnett —
Speculative Faith Reading Group 5: Enter The Lion
Who is Aslan? Is he the same as Jesus Christ? An “allegory” for Him? Or something else entirely? Who would we ask? Also, what about that strange “Lilith” explanation for the White Witch, from “The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe”?
— E. Stephen Burnett —
Speculative Faith Reading Group 6: Greed and Gifts
In these two chapters of “The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe” we see good and evil even more clearly — along with God-exalting, reality-reflecting truths of what really causes evil, and the seriousness of fighting it.
— E. Stephen Burnett —
Speculative Faith Reading Group 7: Aslan Springs Forth
In these two chapters, watch for this contrast: of the wrong sort of “seriousness” — the manipulative, duty-driven dominance of the Witch — versus the joyful, holy, righteous seriousness that Aslan brings.
— E. Stephen Burnett —
Speculative Faith Reading Group 8: The Stone Table
In “The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe,” how has Aslan’s death affected you, and how does it affect you now? How do other stories’ heroes’ deaths remind you of Christ’s ultimate death?
— E. Stephen Burnett —
Speculative Faith Reading Group 9: From Defeat, Final Victory
Even among the greatest stories, the finale of LWW is unique. Here are echoes of Resurrection, eternal joy, and the truth that Christ’s people will reign physically over the New Heavens and New Earth.
— E. Stephen Burnett —
Beyond Inklings Imitations 1: Exploring The Source
Readers have so “cultified” the Inklings that authors and publishers assume the only novels we want to read are imitations of Lewis or Tolkien.
— A. T. Ross —
Shallow Reasons To Support ‘Narnia’ 1
Flawed, over-“spiritual” defenses of the “Narnia” series are not only annoying, but ignore the stories’s central beauties and childlike wonder. Even worse, such approaches ultimately make readers worship God less.
— E. Stephen Burnett —
Beyond Inklings Imitations 2: Stories We May Have Missed
Most of us have read C. S. Lewis, J. R. R. Tolkien, and newer Christian speculative novels. But what authors and classics might we have missed?
— A. T. Ross —
Pages:
«
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
...
20
»
Lorehaven epilogue sponsors