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Candace Kade splices greater complexity into her characters, creating new moral dilemmas in this near-future dystopian adventure.
— Lorehaven Review Team —
280. What Can Men Do Against Such Reckless Hate?
When weâre attacked by tragedy caused by evil beliefs, heroes must âride out and meet them, for death and glory … for your people.â
Thanks to fresh and fast-paced storytelling, E. A. Hendryx sweeps her readers into the orbital world of Suspended in the Stars.
— Molly McTernan —
279. Which Top Three âCage Stagesâ Trap Christian Creators?
Without biblical wisdom, we might lock ourselves into imagining that everything is about a particular doctrine, fandom, or political activism.
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The Pop Culture Parent
‘K-Pop Demon Hunters’ Pits Singing Heroines vs. Monster Idols
Netflix’s smash hit action musical mixes catchy tunes with Korean folklore and some beautiful moments of common grace.
— Marian A. Jacobs —
âSupermanâ (2025) Will Make You Believe a Man Can Be Earnest
The DCUâs reboot presents a hero more sincere than Marvelâs signature blend.
— Josiah DeGraaf —
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Augmented
Candace Kade splices greater complexity into her characters, creating new moral dilemmas in this near-future dystopian adventure.
280. What Can Men Do Against Such Reckless Hate?
When weâre attacked by tragedy caused by evil beliefs, heroes must âride out and meet them, for death and glory … for your people.â
Suspended in the Stars
Thanks to fresh and fast-paced storytelling, E. A. Hendryx sweeps her readers into the orbital world of Suspended in the Stars.
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Candace Kade splices greater complexity into her characters, creating new moral dilemmas in this near-future dystopian adventure.
— Lorehaven Review Team —
When weâre attacked by tragedy caused by evil beliefs, heroes must âride out and meet them, for death and glory … for your people.â
— Fantastical Truth —
Thanks to fresh and fast-paced storytelling, E. A. Hendryx sweeps her readers into the orbital world of Suspended in the Stars.
— Molly McTernan —
Without biblical wisdom, we might lock ourselves into imagining that everything is about a particular doctrine, fandom, or political activism.
— Fantastical Truth —
Although our laments take many forms, we can celebrate how Christ builds His kingdom through âsmallâ and âbigâ people who serve Him.
— Fantastical Truth —
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Weekday Fiction Fix – The Liberty Box By C. A. Gray
C.A. Gray is the author of the YA Fantasy PIERCING THE VEIL trilogy, as well as the NA Dystopian series, THE LIBERTY BOX.
— Rebecca LuElla Miller in February 2017 —
What About Christian Speculative Movies?
Speculative fiction by Christians is not uncommon. Readers can find stories about dragons and wizards, about characters trying to survive in a dystopian world, about a clone who escapes the laboratory, about the people in a new fairy world, about space captains, about space aliens, about vampires, about . . . well, just about anything speculative you can imagine. But how will these stories make it to the big screen?
— Rebecca LuElla Miller in February 2017 —
Fiction Friday – The Long Journey To Jake Palmer
If Jake Palmer had only kept the mundane promise he’d made to himself, his life wouldn’t be headed down a dead-end road at the speed of light.
— Rebecca LuElla Miller in February 2017 —
Six Shallow Criticisms Of Christian Movies
Critics might retire these clichéd lines so we can help Christian creativity mature.
— E. Stephen Burnett in February 2017 —
Black, White, & Gray
Just as
Rogue One
is not a particularly thoughtful movie, neither is it really a complex one.
— Shannon McDermott in February 2017 —
We Have A Winner – 2017 Winter Writing Challenge
Congratulations to our 2017 Winter Writing Challenge winner: Liv K. Fisher. I’ll be contacting her privately to arrange her gift card from either Amazon or B&N.
— Rebecca LuElla Miller in January 2017 —
2017 Winter Writing Challenge Voting Reminder
In case you missed Monday’s post announcing the finalists, you can find it
here
. The entries appear in alphabetical order, determined by the last name of the authors.
— Rebecca LuElla Miller in January 2017 —
Fiction Friday – The Ice Child By Evangeline Denmark
The Ice Child: A Winter Fairy Tale by Evangeline Denmark INTRODUCTION In the novelette, The Ice Child, Sipp, a clockmakerâs apprentice, dreams of opening his own shop, but the people of Martigny believe heâs marked by the devilâall except for […]
— Rebecca LuElla Miller in January 2017 —
How To Fix Christian Fiction: More Christianity
Christian fiction really can be terrible, and thereâs only one cure: more Christianity.
— E. Stephen Burnett in January 2017 —
Finalists – 2017 Spec Faith Winter Writing Challenge
All that’s left is to select the winner. Choose from these entries and
vote
in the poll at the end of this post
for one entry
you think is best.
— Rebecca LuElla Miller in January 2017 —
2017 Winter Writing Challenge Announcement
I encourage you to help all the writers by giving some feedback (besides the thumbs). That way, even those who don’t make the top three can benefit from their participation. Thanks in advance.
— Rebecca LuElla Miller in January 2017 —
Enter The Realm Makers 2017 Awards
Realm Makers and these two awards celebrates art that is excellent, speculative, and made by people of faith.
— Bethany Kaczmarek in January 2017 —
âChristian Fictionâ Vs. âChristians Writing Fictionâ? We Need Both
We need Christian fiction and secular fiction, but not for reasons fans or critics may believe.
— E. Stephen Burnett in January 2017 —
Do Novels Need A Theme or Message To Have Value?
What is the purpose of a good book? Is it solely to provide entertainment, or to entertain with a deeper purpose?
— Zac Totah in January 2017 —
2017 Winter Writing Challenge Status
Feel free to share the original
2017 Winter Writing Challenge post
and to invite your friends and family to read and to give their thumbs up votes. The more input, the more feedback, the better.
— Rebecca LuElla Miller in January 2017 —
Winter Writing Challenge Reminder
The
2017 Spec Faith Winter Writing Challenge
will accept entries until midnight tomorrow, Sunday, January 15. That’s midnight Pacific time.
— Rebecca LuElla Miller in January 2017 —
Authors: Write Less on Writing, More on Stories
Iâd rather explore fantastical stories than read about writing craft and industry.
— E. Stephen Burnett in January 2017 —
2017 Spec Faith Winter Writing Challenge
Itâs time for our winter writing challenge! Winter lends itself to snuggling inside with a good book. For writers, that “good book” might be the one you’re writing. Either way, we’d like to add to your winter writing and reading […]
— Rebecca LuElla Miller in January 2017 —
Author Profile – Lisa T. Bergren
Lisa was born in Kalispell, Montana, on March 28 and raised in Southern California (there must be a story behind that transition!) Growing up she wanted to be “A nurse. An astronaut. Indiana Jones. A teacher. A journalist. One of the Three Musketeers.” Writing, apparently, has made it possible for her to become any of these through her characters.
— Rebecca LuElla Miller in December 2016 —
Sci-fi and Fantasy Let Us Explore
Wrapping your mind around the size of the universe, and our comparatively tiny place in it, gives you a new perspective and appreciation. Science fiction and fantasy do the same thing, on a different scale.
— Zac Totah in December 2016 —
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