Fiction

Welcome to the League

After years of being a sci-fi fan, I became bored with it and mostly abandoned it for fantasy. The cross-genre of science fantasy never appealed to me. Nevertheless, I keep an eye out for new fiction that appeals to my interests. When the first in the League of Elder series Sygillis of Metatron came to my attention, I didn’t know what to make of it from the cover (giant seal?). I quickly became absorbed in this science fantasy tale.

A fascinating story of a hero that tries to save one of his dire enemies whom is trying to kill him. Set in Garcia’s world in which anything can crop up. Space battles. Castles. Bowling. Whatever materializes into his mind. This creativity makes the story breathe. Throw in some action and romance and you have the beginning of an epic. It continues in Hazards of the Old Ones. I haven’t read the next books in the series, so I don’t know where this all is going. The first two volumes, however, deserve a look by anyone needing to escape Earth for a little while.

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Think History & Religion (or History of Religion) Boring?

“Religious historical fiction.” Is that its own genre? Almost. Ever since The DaVinci Code and what it passed as dubious, and often easily disproven, “facts” as its story’s background, the religious thriller has become a mainstay. Put something about a “code,” “codex,” “secret,” “Templar,” “hidden” or “scroll” in the title and you are guaranteed to sell a few. And many of them are good, or at least fun, escapes. A couple even try to get the history right.

Jerome Corsi’s The Shroud Codex weaves the centuries of debates surrounding the Shroud of Turin into a fast-paced story. Not as slick or well-realized as some, but not bad at all for his first novel.

Historian Paul L. Maier has a series that began with A Skeleton in God’s Closet. He uses his background to inject real history into his thrillers, though a few times it sounded as if he was giving a lecture. He also incorporates some current subject(s) of controversy that some of his competing writers are telling tales about. This one weaves in the historical Jesus debates. More Than a Skeleton continues the adventure, this time the hero facing down a supposed “messiah” (and endtimes theology).

The latest, The Constantine Codex finds Maier’s well-traveled characters in the wild world of lost, secret and suppressed manuscripts.

Each of Maier’s is a standalone novel, but I always like starting at the beginning. No matter how much an author explains later, seeing how the characters develop from the start is always best. He improves his storytelling with each, though the potential crisis in the third isn’t quite as humanity-changing as in the others.

History and religion, however, do make for quite the adventures.

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Stepping Through the Mirror

Myth has inspired some of the great works of literature. Worlds that we disappear into, away from our real existence, yet the best inspire and teach as well or better than any nonfiction. Primarily because they engage our imagination, the most powerful part of our intellect.

So from here forward, I will be expanding the scope of this site to include more on fiction and the fascinating worlds they contain. Even though I am old-school when it comes to reading (paper please), e-books may have opened a golden opportunity to reintroduce the power of fiction. Still, paper is going nowhere too soon as it is far more durable than our best inventions. Funny, isn’t it?

Where to begin but with the father of modern fantasy, George MacDonald. Many readers probably are unfamiliar with this man, yet he inspired C.S. Lewis. He and his children encouraged Lewis Carroll to publish. Long before Tolkien, MacDonald was revealing fantastic worlds. More in the style of fairy tale fantasy than epic, but an absolute must for fantasy fans. Over a hundred years ago, this author started it all with his sophisticated and magical stories.

Phantastes
Lilith
The Princess and the Goblin
The Princess and Curdie
The Complete Fairy Tales

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