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Non Christian Fantasy
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Abby
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Oct 28, 2010 05:52PM

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It's sort of important to note that the Christian category is over-run with books produced by Trademark Christian publishers whose work is targeted to a very specific audience. Sadly, this has many throwing authors who write stories from their Christian beliefs out in the non-Christian category.
In other words these targeted publishers hi-jacked the label Christian. A book isn't non-Christian if doesn't show up in the Christian category. It's simply not targeted and written for general market audiences such as yourself which actually includes mostly Christians of one belief or another. ;)
I know, it's confusing at best. I'm still trying to figure out who gave one targeted group the permission to exclusive use of a broad label like Christian. Really?
In other words these targeted publishers hi-jacked the label Christian. A book isn't non-Christian if doesn't show up in the Christian category. It's simply not targeted and written for general market audiences such as yourself which actually includes mostly Christians of one belief or another. ;)
I know, it's confusing at best. I'm still trying to figure out who gave one targeted group the permission to exclusive use of a broad label like Christian. Really?

All of that said, there are some non-Christian fantasy writers that I've read with great enjoyment. I haven't read virulently anti-Christian fantasists like Philip Pullman, who avowedly use their work as a platform for propaganda against religious belief, and personally don't have any desire to. But that doesn't describe all non-Christian fantasy writers; there are some whose work reflects, to varying degrees, the common grace and general revelation that all humans share. Piers Anthony, who's a professed agnostic, is an excellent example; both in his delightful Xanth series and in Through the Ice (co-written with the late Robert Kornwise, who was Jewish) he shows himself to be a profoundly ethically-oriented writer, centrally concerned with promoting good moral choices and attitudes, and frequently exploring the ethical problems and challenges of his characters.
Being a fan of sword-and-sorcery fantasy myself, one of my favorite fantasy writers is Robert E. Howard (creator of Conan and Kull, among other characters). None of his biographers mention any Christian connection on his part, and his work has no distinct Christian elements; some Christian readers might be quite repelled by the level of gory violence and the orientation towards a decidedly tough-minded view of the world that's present in his work. But he grew up in what was still a Christian-influenced culture; and for all their toughness and perception of life as a fight that they'd better win, Howard heroes like Conan and Kull do exude a basic moral integrity, sympathy for the underdog and respect for honesty and fair-dealing (as well as disdain for the opposites --if Conan had been around when Jesus cleansed the Temple, I could picture him nodding in hearty approval :-) ).

As a Mormon writer, Orson Scott Card would classify himself as a Christian writer; but he's nevertheless certainly outside the ECPA, evangelical camp. While he's primarily an SF writer, his Tales of Alvin Maker series, set in an alternate 19th-century America where magic works, is one of my favorite fantasy series. Some other favorites of mine in the fantasy field are Charles de Lint, Raymond Feist, and Terry Brooks. I don't know anything one way or the other about their religious beliefs (except that Feist's fiction indicates belief in God, and Brooks uses some Christian terminology in Running With the Demon --though the basic worldview there seems to be more dualistic than Christian, IMO); but they write for the secular publishing industry, and their fiction, while wholesome, is not "sanitized."

Although I realize that Lord of the Rings is one that is quite hard to box in to either category by my definition. It was written by a Christian man, though not marketed as Christian literature. It has Christian metaphors, but not blatant or overpowering ones. You have to look for them. So, I see that my definitions are not all-encompassing.
However, by my definitions, what do you guys like to read that falls somewhat into the non-Christian genre?


Another "book" I love (I put book in quotes as I'm about to mention another trilogy but I read it in an omnibus edition and always think of the trilogy as one book. the title I use is that of the omnibus edition) is The Deed of Paksenarrion. While the book presents a world of polytheism, there are obvious Christian principals in play. I suppose it's an eye of the beholder thing but (and I would think Roman Catholics might find it even easier to identify with this story. The use of marshal saints for example) (by the way I'm not R. Catholic). Still I think most Christians who are looking for a fantasy read might enjoy this one.
There are others of course, Jim Butcher's frank discussion of his doubts about religion while writing a character who is openly Christian and of great faith as a supporting character is an example. Even Dracula is based in a Christian world view that is more rare today.
Being a writer of YA Christan fantasy, I find this discussion fascinating.
I began writing my series ALLON Allon: Book 1because my daughter asked me. Some have argued the Christian merits of Harry Potter, but we disagree with that,which is why we didn't let her read it to begin with. However, she felt left out of conversations with her friends and that prompted her request. From there it grew to where the friends became interested in what her mom was writing.
For me, the goal of an author should be to write with a purpose. My purpose began by giving my daughter her story, but grew to become a tool to help her friends of different faiths and cultures understand the Truth we Christians hold dear and the hope it give us.
What better way to do this than to follow Christ's own example of parables and stories.
I began writing my series ALLON Allon: Book 1because my daughter asked me. Some have argued the Christian merits of Harry Potter, but we disagree with that,which is why we didn't let her read it to begin with. However, she felt left out of conversations with her friends and that prompted her request. From there it grew to where the friends became interested in what her mom was writing.
For me, the goal of an author should be to write with a purpose. My purpose began by giving my daughter her story, but grew to become a tool to help her friends of different faiths and cultures understand the Truth we Christians hold dear and the hope it give us.
What better way to do this than to follow Christ's own example of parables and stories.


Anathem is possibly his most fantasy-esque work so far, with strong religious themes. But the religion itself is fantastical, being essentially a story about a monastic community of mathematicians.
Anyone else a fan of Stephenson's writing?



Books mentioned in this topic
Anathem (other topics)Snow Crash (other topics)
Allon (other topics)
The Deed of Paksenarrion (other topics)