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ARTICLE Writing Fantasy
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Related articles: Plotting your story - structure Create a multi-dimensional character Related reviews: Plotting and writing suspense fiction by Patricia Highsmith The Right to Write by Julia Cameron
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The Quest is one of the most popular Fantasy themes. Moving characters from one part of the fantasy world to another, allows the author room to describe and use all the creativity they put into building their unique world. Swords as weapons and the use of magic are so intrinsic to fantasy writing that the Sword and Sorcery theme is often blended with even the most modern fantasy twist. Even Star Wars made use of the sword-like Light Sabre to introduce the romantic, swashbuckling action that sword-fighting allows.
Since various periods in our own history prior to the industrial revolution offer great inspiration for the atmosphere and environments of many fantasy stories, it’s only natural that some writers have also found inspiration in the myths, legends, and folklore of the same periods. Arthurian fantasy has been popular for a long time, as have various fairy tales, and a lot of fantasy and horror-fantasy has come out of stories from around Eastern Europe, (including those involving vampires and werewolves).
An entire comic-book and graphic novel subculture has developed around the Urban Fantasy and Cyber Punk Fantasy sub-genres. These stories are set in modern cities rather than the rural villages popular with other fantasy stories. Technology and computers feature heavily, but the genre differs from Science Fiction in the use of magic and superhuman powers. Fantasy lends itself well to parody because it is highly identifiable and many clichés have developed over the years which can be exploited to good effect for humour. Terry Pratchett is one of the foremost fantasy parody writers. copyright © Elsa Neal 2006 This article also features on BellaOnline. The Tough Guide to Fantasyland : The Essential Guide to Fantasy Travel by Diana Wynne Jones is a fantasy parody that illustrates the most popular fantasy clichés. Essential reading if you want to avoid these. Also try The Complete Guide to Writing Fantasy edited by Tom Dullemond
The Writers Complete Fantasy Reference : An Indispensable Compendium of Myth and Magic
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