(no subject)
Jul. 19th, 2007 03:41 pmOh c'mon, you had to see this coming:
Could the next Harry Potter be a devout Christian?
As the days tick down until Saturday, when a breathless world learns the fate of the teenage wizard, a new breed of fantasy fiction, with Potter-style stories, is emerging.
Like the Potter series, it has mystical creatures, macabre events, epic battles and heroic young protagonists.
But, unlike the Potter books, this genre has overt Christian tones: messiah-like kings who return from the dead, fallen satanic characters and young heroes who undergo profound conversions. What you won't generally find: humans waving wands and performing spells.
[...]
Steeple Hill, the Christian fiction imprint of romance publisher Harlequin, will churn out 128 titles this year while hewing to strict standards followed by many Christian book publishers: No swearing (not even "gosh" and "darn"), no dancing or drinking by Christian characters, no gambling, no mention of intimate body parts. And forget sex scenes, even if the characters are married to each other.
TBogg comments:
So basically the books will be like the Bible but with more sword fights and less gay-stonings. This could be bigger than Christian Rap.
Isn't all fantasy fiction pretty much the Ultimate Battle Between Good and Evil from Narnia to The Stand?
"Gosh" is a swear word? Huh, I did not know that. And the whole no dancing thing, I thought that was just a rule for the more, uh shall we say, "eccentric" of the Christian groups.
Could the next Harry Potter be a devout Christian?
As the days tick down until Saturday, when a breathless world learns the fate of the teenage wizard, a new breed of fantasy fiction, with Potter-style stories, is emerging.
Like the Potter series, it has mystical creatures, macabre events, epic battles and heroic young protagonists.
But, unlike the Potter books, this genre has overt Christian tones: messiah-like kings who return from the dead, fallen satanic characters and young heroes who undergo profound conversions. What you won't generally find: humans waving wands and performing spells.
[...]
Steeple Hill, the Christian fiction imprint of romance publisher Harlequin, will churn out 128 titles this year while hewing to strict standards followed by many Christian book publishers: No swearing (not even "gosh" and "darn"), no dancing or drinking by Christian characters, no gambling, no mention of intimate body parts. And forget sex scenes, even if the characters are married to each other.
TBogg comments:
So basically the books will be like the Bible but with more sword fights and less gay-stonings. This could be bigger than Christian Rap.
Isn't all fantasy fiction pretty much the Ultimate Battle Between Good and Evil from Narnia to The Stand?
"Gosh" is a swear word? Huh, I did not know that. And the whole no dancing thing, I thought that was just a rule for the more, uh shall we say, "eccentric" of the Christian groups.
no subject
Date: 2007-07-20 02:35 am (UTC)"Gosh" is a swear word?
I was raised to believe this, actually. (Though it's fairly evident that I don't buy it any more, huh?)
The general idea as I understand it is that it's a substitute for using the name of the Lord in vain. The rather dominionist church I grew up in held that it wasn't so much the words you used as the emotions behind them that constituted the profanity -- that saying "Gosh" with the same intent and in the same context as one would take the Lord's name in vain still amounted to swearing.
That went for "darn," "heck," etc.
no subject
Date: 2007-07-20 04:25 pm (UTC)