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Visionary Fiction Alliance
  • The Lesser Known Novels of Dion Fortune,  Part 3 – by Theresa Crater
    Blog

    The Lesser Known Novels of Dion Fortune, Part 3 – by Theresa Crater

    ByTheresa Crater April 6, 2015February 17, 2021

    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 . . . [T]hose who study The Mystical Qabalah with the help of the novels get the keys of the Temple put into their hands.” ~ from…

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  • Drugs, Meditation, and Creativity
    Blog

    Drugs, Meditation, and Creativity

    ByGuest Author March 30, 2015February 7, 2020

    This week, William T. Hathaway shares his story on how he was inspired to write visionary fiction. Read how he steered his pain toward a creative path: At the age of 15 I decided I was going to be a writer. I loved books, and writing them seemed to be the greatest thing in the world to do. Now…

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  • Visionary Fiction Part One: The Bucket
    Blog | Key Posts

    Visionary Fiction Part One: The Bucket

    ByVictor Smith March 15, 2015

    By Victor E. Smith
    “We tried mightily to get the retailing powers to start a visionary fiction shelf. We came close with Walden, but the suits at B&N, alas, took the position of ‘no one is coming into the store asking for visionary fiction’,” said editor Bob Friedman of the situation as he saw it at Hampton Roads Publishing some years ago.

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  • Sex and Spirituality Find a Home in Visionary Fiction – by Peggy Payne
    Author Announcements | Blog | Guest Posts | Key Posts

    Sex and Spirituality Find a Home in Visionary Fiction – by Peggy Payne

    ByGuest Author March 9, 2015February 7, 2020

    Where sex and spirituality meet is in the experience of dropping boundaries, of feeling expansion, dissolution, limitlessness. In both, we can have the experience of dissolving into a larger existence, joining a great ocean of being. Where sex-and-spirituality fits well is in the world of Visionary Fiction, which allows the reader to feel the experience…

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  • Dion Fortune: Spiritual Teacher and Visionary Fiction Writer, Part 2 – by Theresa Crater
    Blog

    Dion Fortune: Spiritual Teacher and Visionary Fiction Writer, Part 2 – by Theresa Crater

    ByTheresa Crater March 2, 2015March 9, 2020

    (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 it in exactly that light.”  In The Secrets of Dr. Taverner, Dion Fortune’s short story collection featuring the magical adept and psychiatrist by the same…

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  • Interview with Dean Koontz: “Metaphysics are the ink in my pen.”
    Blog | Interviews | Key Posts

    Interview with Dean Koontz: “Metaphysics are the ink in my pen.”

    ByMargaret Duarte February 16, 2015February 17, 2021

    Genre is a subjective marketing category that often misleads rather than informs. Some books defy classification, especially books by Dean Koontz. How do you pin down stories that fit at least a dozen marketing labels, including: Action, Adventure, Crime, Horror, Humor, Mystery, Philosophical, Science Fiction, Speculative, Thriller, Urban, and, yes, Visionary Fiction? No one could…

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  • Dean Koontz: That guy with “horror” tattooed on his forehead.
    Blog | Interviews

    Dean Koontz: That guy with “horror” tattooed on his forehead.

    ByMargaret Duarte February 9, 2015February 17, 2021

    Dean Koontz prefers to avoid genre labels. By his own admission, he writes “cross-genre novels in a mainstream style, with elements of comedy and social commentary and philosophical speculation.” That said, I hold firm to my conviction that much of Dean Koontz’s work contains elements of visionary fiction as detailed in the Wikipedia article written by our…

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  • The Delicate Balance in Visionary Fiction – by Rea Nolan Martin
    Blog | Guest Posts | VF Technique

    The Delicate Balance in Visionary Fiction – by Rea Nolan Martin

    ByGuest Author February 2, 2015February 5, 2022

    Editor’s note: One of our Visionary Fiction Alliance founding members, Margaret Duarte, wrote a review of Rea Martin Nolan’s latest book, Mystic Tea. You can read the review here. We were so pleased with how Rea represented Visionary Fiction that we asked her to share her perspective on what is important in writing Visionary Fiction, and…

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  • Dion Fortune: Spiritual Teacher and Visionary Fiction Writer, Part 1 – by Theresa Crater
    Blog

    Dion Fortune: Spiritual Teacher and Visionary Fiction Writer, Part 1 – by Theresa Crater

    ByTheresa Crater January 26, 2015March 9, 2020

    Many people are familiar with Dion Fortune as a spiritual teacher in the Western Metaphysical Tradition, the founder of Fraternity of the Inner Light (later re-named the Society of the Inner Light). She was born Violet Mary Firth in Wales in December of 1890. Dion Fortune showed psychic abilities as a child, and later reported…

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  • The Power of Place in Writing a Novel
    Blog | Key Posts

    The Power of Place in Writing a Novel

    ByJodine Turner January 12, 2015February 9, 2020

    Have you ever thought about the power of place, of setting, in writing your novel? The setting in most novels is nonspecific. Meaning that, while setting itself is important, the specificity of the setting is oftentimes not. The high school romance between Bella and Edward in Stephenie Meyer’s Twilight could have begun in any modern…

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  • Interview with Author Jacklyn A. Lo
    Blog | Interviews

    Interview with Author Jacklyn A. Lo

    ByEleni Papanou January 1, 2015February 9, 2020

    By Eleni Papanou This week, the Visionary Fiction Alliance is focusing on author, Jacklyn A. Lo  and her debut novel, Redemption. She was inspired to write the story because of the “magic of it.”  To set the mood, we begin with Jacklyn’s path to writing the book. Read how she beautifully explains what drives her to create visionary fiction….

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  • The “Flyby” in Visionary Fiction, Part Two
    Blog

    The “Flyby” in Visionary Fiction, Part Two

    ByVictor Smith December 21, 2014March 31, 2021

    Flybys are not flukes. At first they may seem to appear by accident, luck or chance, which, if true, would make them a dastardly unpredictable source for a visionary story or anything else of worth. While keeping aside the worthy argument that nothing is truly accidental, let’s look at ways to increase the odds of returning from the hunt laden with healthy flybys .

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  • Fiction’s Battle for Acceptance in Islam, as Metaphor for Visionary Fiction:  Part Two
    Blog | Guest Posts | Key Posts | Series

    Fiction’s Battle for Acceptance in Islam, as Metaphor for Visionary Fiction: Part Two

    ByStephen Weinstock December 15, 2014March 17, 2021

    Part Two You can view Part One of this intriguing exploration by guest author Stephen Weinstock here. In Part One, I outlined the parallels between Arabic fiction’s uphill battle for acceptance in the first centuries of Islam. I believe the criticism and slow acceptance of Visionary Fiction goes back to the same kind of interdiction…

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  • Fiction’s Battle for Acceptance in Islam, as Metaphor for Visionary Fiction
    Blog | Key Posts | Series

    Fiction’s Battle for Acceptance in Islam, as Metaphor for Visionary Fiction

    ByStephen Weinstock December 8, 2014March 17, 2021

    Part One In researching Book Three of my series 1001: The Reincarnation Chronicles, I read a great deal about the history of Arabic Literature. I am no Arabic scholar, but I had to learn about medieval Persian and Arabic culture. My characters, in their past lives in 10th century Baghdad, collaborate on a special version…

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  • The “Flyby” in Visionary Fiction, Part One
    Blog

    The “Flyby” in Visionary Fiction, Part One

    ByVictor Smith November 23, 2014February 9, 2020

    Where do the ideas and visions that eventually become complex cities and timeless books come from? I don’t know actually—how to blunt a piece from the get-go! However, I do know that they first show up as blip of light barely large and lasting enough to evoke a “What the heck was that?” It gets a smidge of our attention before it flicks on by.

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  • Are Fairy Tales Turning Visionary?
    Blog | VF in Popular Culture

    Are Fairy Tales Turning Visionary?

    BySaleena Karim November 17, 2014February 9, 2020

    Although much visionary fiction has magical and fantasy elements in common with the fairy tales of old, the two differ in some fundamental respects. The themes of the conventional fairy tale revolve about the triumph of good over evil, where the heroes are princes and princesses, or peasants who marry princes and princesses and gain a kingdom…

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  • Visionary Fiction on the Genre Shelf
    Blog

    Visionary Fiction on the Genre Shelf

    ByMargaret Duarte November 10, 2014February 1, 2020

    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 make room on the shelf for fiction that “speaks the language of the soul and offers a vision of humanity as we dream it could…

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  • Fantasy, Spiritual, or Visionary Fiction
    Author Announcements | Blog | Guest Posts

    Fantasy, Spiritual, or Visionary Fiction

    ByAaron C. Yeagle November 3, 2014February 9, 2020

    Editor’s Note: We are happy to offer popular and respected Visionary Fiction author Peggy Payne’s latest thoughts on Visionary Fiction and the novels she writes. Last night, as guest speaker at a book club in Holly Springs, North Carolina, I talked my way to a new understanding of what kind of novel I’m in the midst…

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  • Therapeutic Benefits of Visionary Fiction – Application – Part 5
    Blog | Series

    Therapeutic Benefits of Visionary Fiction – Application – Part 5

    ByEleni Papanou October 27, 2014March 17, 2021

    This is the final installment of the Visionary Fiction as Personal Therapy Series.  In part 1, we discussed recognition, when a reader experiences a sense of familiarity while reading. In part 2, visionary fiction authors expressed their feelings of recognition while they were writing their stories. In part 3, various authors discussed how they reacted to issues…

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  • The Importance of Vision in Fiction
    Blog | Guest Posts

    The Importance of Vision in Fiction

    ByGuest Author October 13, 2014March 17, 2021

    Visionary fiction is a category of fiction that brings a strong vision of the world, points a way forward through tough times. When fiction is billed as visionary it seems to elicit excitement or groans. Bestsellers or flops. And this is usually because it is so easy for visionary fiction to stray into preachiness and…

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  • Carl Jung’s Portrait of the Visionary Artist
    Blog | Key Posts

    Carl Jung’s Portrait of the Visionary Artist

    ByVictor Smith October 6, 2014February 17, 2021

    Art is kind of an innate drive that seizes a human being and makes him its instrument. The artist is not a person endowed with free will who seeks his own ends, but one who allows art to realize its purposes through him. Carl Jung, “Psychology and Literature,” Modern Man in Search of a Soul,…

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  • Visionary Flop to Best Seller
    Blog | Key Posts | Promotion

    Visionary Flop to Best Seller

    ByMargaret Duarte September 22, 2014February 5, 2022

    What if I were to tell you that one of the best selling books in history is visionary fiction? Say what? Yep, The Alchemist by Paulo Coelho, one of the most widely read books in the world, is visionary fiction. And its rise from a flop in 1988 (with sales so dismal that the book was dropped…

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  • Therapeutic Benefits of Visionary Fiction – Examination – Part 4
    Blog | Series

    Therapeutic Benefits of Visionary Fiction – Examination – Part 4

    ByEleni Papanou September 17, 2014March 31, 2021

    This is part 4 of the Visionary Fiction as Personal Therapy Series inspired by  an article on bibliotherapy by Debbie McCullis in the February, 2014 issue of the Journal of Poetry Therapy. In part 1, we discussed recognition, which is when a reader experiences a sense of familiarity while reading.

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  • The Most Important Petition You’ll Ever Sign
    Blog | VFA News

    The Most Important Petition You’ll Ever Sign

    BySaleena Karim September 10, 2014February 5, 2022

    Note from the author The Visionary Fiction Alliance is dedicated to fiction, but since it’s fiction with a purpose, its authors necessarily care deeply about what human beings are doing to themselves and the world in which they live. In a a sense that is unique to these writers, their stories are always rooted in something…

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  • #Art Saved My Life
    Blog | Key Posts

    #Art Saved My Life

    ByJodine Turner August 31, 2014February 9, 2020

    “Myths are public dreams, dreams are private myths….Myth must be kept alive. The people who can keep it alive are the artists of one kind or another.” – Joseph Campbell #Art saved my life   #Art healed my heart    #Art healed my soul The hashtags are coming in from around the country, flooding social…

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  • Synchronicity, Meaningful Coincidences
    Blog | Key Posts

    Synchronicity, Meaningful Coincidences

    ByMargaret Duarte August 25, 2014February 17, 2021

    Before I became a serious writer, my powers of observation made me about as Sherlock Holmes-like as an open secret or plastic glasses. In other words, I was a perfect antonym for the famous detective, who took such pains to notice subtle cues and details in the people and situations around him. I didn’t need blinders. Mine were built…

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  • “Visionary Fiction” Now Officially on Wikipedia
    Blog | VFA News

    “Visionary Fiction” Now Officially on Wikipedia

    ByVictor Smith August 19, 2014February 5, 2022

    “Visionary Fiction” Now Officially on Wikipedia. Share this… Facebook Pinterest Twitter Linkedin

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