Two New Arthurian Visionary Fiction Novels – Guest Post by Theresa Crater
“Well now, there’s legends and then there’s secrets that the legends hide.” ~The Singing Stones Dolores Ashcroft-Nowicki and T.L. Ashcroft-Nowicki, mother and daughter, have both written new takes on the … Continue reading →
Jodine Turner’s The Goddess of the Stars and the Sea series – guest post by Theresa Crater
Jodine Turner’s Visionary Fiction series traces the reincarnations of a priestess specially called to do the work of the Goddess of the Stars and the Sea, an Ancient One … Continue reading →
The Lesser Known Novels of Dion Fortune, Part 3 – by Theresa Crater
Read Part 1 and Part 2 of Theresa Crater’s review of Dion Fortune’s Visionary Fiction novels. “The Mystical Qabalah gives the theory, but the novels give the practice . . … Continue reading →
Dion Fortune: Spiritual Teacher and Visionary Fiction Writer, Part 2 – by Theresa Crater
(You can read Part 1 of Theresa Crater’s series on Visionary Fiction author Dion Fortune here.) “He thought less of death than most people think of emigration; in fact, he seemed to regard … Continue reading →
Visionary Fiction on the Genre Shelf
Visionary fiction is not metaphysical fiction. Visionary fiction is not magical realism. Visionary fiction is not religious fiction or sci-fi or fantasy. What will it take for traditional publishers to … Continue reading →
DIVERGENT and Visionary Fiction, Same Umbrella, Different Factions
Violence aside, I would gladly welcome the dystopian sci-fi novel Divergent into our “faction” here at Visionary Fiction Alliance. Veronica Roth deserves her New York Times Bestselling Author status. She deserves her … Continue reading →
‘A Winters Tale’ – a Movie Experience of Visionary Fiction
We are well aware that Visionary Fiction, with regards to the publishing industry, is a genre in its infancy, though its form and mode of storytelling is perennial. One way … Continue reading →
Dean Koontz’s INNOCENCE; Sometimes We Are Wrong
If beauty is in the eye of the beholder, what about ugliness? How do we define ugly? What repulses us? And why? In his latest novel, INNOCENCE, Dean Koontz shows … Continue reading →