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MIDDLE GRADE
Newest fantastical books we’ve found
Best for older children ages 8–12
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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
TEENS + YA
Newest fantastical books we’ve found
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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
ADULTS
Newest fantastical books we’ve found
Challenging novels for wise readers 18 and up.
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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 God’s 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
Subscribe for free
Share your novel with new fans!
Lorehaven is reaching Christian fans, homeschool families, church influencers, and cultural conservatives.
Do Daily Wire Hosts Want to Tear Down Culture or Build It Up?
Which way, western man? Behind the Candace Owens/Ben Shapiro feud lies a deeper divide over the purpose of cultural conservatism.
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E. Stephen Burnett
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SpecFaith results for
safe stories
Safe Fiction Is Dangerous (Or, A Review Of How To Train Your Dragon)
Ideas that float in under the radar, however, enter our minds unchallenged, co-exist with the truth, and someday, after they’ve been fortified, may even challenge the truth to a shootout.
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Rebecca LuElla Miller
Is Netflix ‘Not Safe, but Good’ for Narnia?
Netflix had acquired all rights to make films based on C. S. Lewis’s magical world of Narnia. Let us take the adventure that Aslan sends us.
·
E. Stephen Burnett
3 Reasons We Need to Read About Evil In Stories
Evil’s not a topic we like to face. We want to keep it safely locked away where it can’t cause discomfort. But we need to have it in front of us, to be reminded it exists. Especially in stories.
·
Zac Totah
Great Stories Can Help You Find A Greater Savior
Redemptive storytelling helps some people take the first step toward ultimately embracing Jesus Christ.
·
Johne Cook
Does ‘Guardians Of The Galaxy’ Use ‘Safe’ Bad Words?
Drax from “Guardians of the Galaxy” calls his friends names. Why do we like him anyway?
·
E. Stephen Burnett
Should Stories Always End Well?
“And they lived happily ever after.” Everyone knows that phrase. The standard line resounds through numerous stories, wrapping the tale’s end in a sparkly, feel-good bow and sending the characters off to a blissful life of painless euphoria. But, to […]
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Zac Totah
Should Christian Stories Evangelize? Chapter 1
Should Christian stories evangelize? Join our new #StoryEvangelism discussion that starts with term definitions.
·
E. Stephen Burnett
Stories And Human Nature
What I find fascinating about these three movies is the theme that runs through them—unlikeable characters depicting marriage as psychological warfare; evil is real and we can’t get rid of it; and “good” removed leaves evil to fend for—and against—itself.
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Rebecca LuElla Miller
Safe Fiction Is Dangerous (Or, A Review Of How To Train Your Dragon)
“Safe” fiction is the most dangerous kind because people are disarmed, no longer alert to possible ideas that may foster a false worldview.
·
Rebecca LuElla Miller
Hollywood Worldviews And Safe Fiction
“It is not only true, honorable and right to proclaim that Jesus is the way, the truth and the life, but it is also true, honorable and right to proclaim that Satan is the father of lies”—Brian Godawa
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Rebecca LuElla Miller
Safe Fiction – Discernment, Tim Downs, And First The Dead
What I’m wondering … really, what I’m doubting … is if one person can make a determination for another that a particular work is “safe.”
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Rebecca LuElla Miller
No Story Is Safe
Any story can be used for evil, no matter how wholesome, artistic, gritty, fantastic, or historical.
·
E. Stephen Burnett
Stories For Christians 1: The New ‘watchful Dragons’
C.S. Lewis wrote about “watchful dragons” 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
Introduction: Hunger by Jill Williamson
Jill is a prolific writer. Besides her dystopian Safe Lands books, she wrote a straight science fiction story about cloning called
Replication
, a young adult series suited for younger teens called The Mission League books, two co-authored (with her son) children’s stories in her RoboTales series, and several fantasy series.
·
Rebecca LuElla Miller
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