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Description

For all the years we’ve kept up with Christian-made fiction, many authors have hoped to “cross over.” They don’t want to reach only readers who are Christians. Instead, they also want to influence unbelievers. This is a great goal, to be sure. But when may our pictures of “unbelievers” not match with reality? And just within the last few years, has the “general audience” shifted so gradually that they might enjoy more overt Christian-made fiction?

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  1. Enclave Publishing: Above the Circle of Earth by E. Stephen Burnett
  2. Sunrise Publishing: Squire of Truth by Jill Williamson
  3. Kickstarter for A Study in Shattered Spells by Josiah DeGraaf

Mission update

Concession stand

1. How do we imagine ‘the general audience’?

2. But what is the actual ‘general audience’?

  1. Christian fans, individuals who enjoy reading/making these stories
  2. Homeschool families, clans who train their kids to love reading books
  3. Church influencers, evangelical leaders open to good fantastical fiction
  4. Cultural conservatives, non-Christians who are open to biblical virtues

3. What are the ‘vibe shift’ pros and cons?

Advantages abound for Christian creators of fantasy

But we may face new threats while engaging this culture

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Top question for listeners

Next on Fantastical Truth

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