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There is magic in stories. This is an important idea that I blog out every now and then, and today seems like a good day to recover this point.
Magic is the transmutation of objects or the manipulation of the world in ways that move outside the realm of science. Whether or not magic is real in the sense of the here and now world is not the point; magic is a metaphor for fiction. Stephen King says, โbooks are a uniquely portable magicโ (104). This magic is in the words, in their transmitting from the writer to the reader other worlds and ideas. In writing fiction, writers create a world that was not there; even so-called realistic, literary writers create an alternate world that readers inhabit when they read the book. The writers and the readers, in a mystical incantation, create another reality, one that can be so strong sometimes that readers can be moved to tears or laughter or sadness or joy or grief or sorrow or despair or hope. Readers come to care about the characters and feel empathy as if they were real.
That is a kind of magic.
Neil Gaiman, in his introduction to Ray Bradburyโsย 60th Anniversary Edition Fahrenheit 451, speaks to the power of the written word and stories: โIdeasโwritten ideasโare special. They are the way we our stories and our thoughts from one generation to the next. If we lose them, we lose our shared history. We lose much of what makes us human. And fiction gives us empathy: it puts us inside the minds of other people, gives us the gift of seeing the world through their eyes. Fiction is a lie that tells us true things, over and overโ (xvi). It is through the creation of artificial worlds, no matter how speculative or fantastic, that we experience our world in more intensity and with deeper clarity.
This act of magic is what we share as writers and readers. I am honored to be a mere apprentice in the magic of writing novels.
Works Cited
Gaiman, Neil. โIntroduction.โ Ray Bradbury. 60th Anniversary Edition Fahrenheit 451. New
York: Simon & Schuster, 2013.
King, Stephen. On Writing: A Memoir of the Craft. New York: Scribner, 2000.
Those words by Neil Gaiman are very true, Charles. Books do help us maintain our joint history and teach us understanding and empathy for others.
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Robbie, I completely agree with you.
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Beautiful!
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Thank you!
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I love this, Charles! Magic, indeed.
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Jennie, thank you so much!
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Youโre welcome, Charles!
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Reblogged this on Jeanne Owens, author.
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Thank you!
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I couldn’t agree more! That magic is what I live for.
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So do I!
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๐
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Pens…mightier than the sword… and words often twice as sharp!
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Yes, they are!
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