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A serious adult story must be true to something in life. Since marvel tales cannot be true to the events of life, they must shift their emphasis towards something to which they can be true; namely, certain wistful or restless moods of the human spirit, wherein it seeks to weave gossamer ladders of escape from the galling tyranny of time, space, and natural law.

~ H.p. Lovecraft

H.p. Lovecraft Fantastic Fantasy Genre Horror Supernatural Writing

An admirable line of Pablo Neruda’s, “My creatures are born of a long denial,” seems to me the best definition of writing as a kind of exorcism, casting off invading creatures by projecting them into universal existence, keeping them on the other side of the bridge… It may be exaggerating to say that all completely successful short stories, especially fantastic stories, are products of neurosis, nightmares or hallucination neutralized through objectification and translated to a medium outside the neurotic terrain. This polarization can be found in any memorable short story, as if the author, wanting to rid himself of his creature as soon and as absolutely as possible, exorcises it the only way he can: by writing it.

~ Julio Cortázar

Julio Cortázar Fantastic Fantasy Genre Horror Story Writers Writing

Skill alone cannot teach or produce a great short story, which condenses the obsession of the creature; it is a hallucinatory presence manifest from the first sentence to fascinate the reader, to make him lose contact with the dull reality that surrounds him, submerging him in another that is more intense and compelling.

~ Julio Cortázar

Julio Cortázar Fantastic Fantasy Genre Horror Story Writers Writing

There are... otherwise quite decent people who are so dull of nature that they believe that they must attribute the swift flight of fancy to some illness of the psyche, and thus it happens that this or that writer is said to create not other than while imbibing intoxicating drink or that his fantasies are the result of overexcited nerves and resulting fever. But who can fail to know that, while a state of psychical excitement caused by the one or other stimulant may indeed generate some lucky and brilliant ideas, it can never produce a well-founded, substantial work of art that requires the utmost presence of mind.

~ E.t.a. Hoffmann

E.t.a. Hoffmann Fantastic Fantastique Fantasy Genre Horror Inspiration Supernatural Writer Writing

But if what interests you are stories of the fantastic, I must warn you that this kind of story demands more art and judgment than is ordinarily imagined.

~ Charles Nodier

Charles Nodier Art Fantastic Fantasy Genre Horror Supernatural Writers Writing

Theatres are curious places, magician's trick-boxes where the golden memories of dramtic triumphs linger like nostalgic ghosts, and where the unexplainable, the fantastic, the tragic, the comic and the absurd are routine occurences on and off the stage. Murders, mayhem, politcal intrigue, lucrative business, secret assignations, and of course, dinner.

~ E.a. Bucchianeri

E.a. Bucchianeri Acting Actors Dinner Drama Dramatic Fantastic Food Funny Humor I Love The Theater I Love The Theatre Murder Mysteries Nostalgia Opera Opera House Plays Playwrights Politics Satire Secrets Theater Theatre Theatre Of The Absurd

The imaginary is not formed in opposition to reality as its denial or compensation; it grows among signs, from book to book, in the interstice of repetitions and commentaries; it is born and takes shape in the interval between books. It is the phenomena of the library.

~ Michel Foucault

Michel Foucault Books Fantastic Fantasy Imagination Reading

Let us depart instead for the fields of Dreams and wander those blue, romantic hills where stands the abandoned tower of the Supernatural, where cool mosses clothe the ruins of Idealism. Let us, in short, indulge in a little fantasy!

~ Eça De Queirós

Eça De Queirós Dreams Fantastic Fantasy Idealism Literature Supernatural

In the great glasshouses streaming with condensation, the children in mourning-dress beheld marvels.

~ Arthur Rimbaud

Arthur Rimbaud Children Fantastic Fantasy Marvels

Children seem to need, then, a delicate balance between the realistic and the fantastic in their art; enough of the realistic to know that the story matters, enough of the fantastic to make what matters wonderful

~ Eric S. Rabkin

Eric S. Rabkin Children Fantastic Fantasy

What is admirable about the fantastic is that there is no longer anything fantastic: there is only the real.

~ André Breton

André Breton Fantastic Fantastique Fantasy Surrealism

Surrealism, then, neither aims to subvert realism, as does the fantastic, nor does it try to transcend it. It looks for different means by which to explore reality itself.

~ Michael Richardson

Michael Richardson Fantastic Fantastique Fantasy Realism Reality Surrealism

Anyone who still wants to experience fairytales these days can’t afford to dither when it comes to using their brains.

~ Robert Musil

Robert Musil Fantastic Fantasy

The fantastic breaks the crust of appearance … something grabs us by the shoulders to throw us outside ourselves. I have always known that the big surprises await us where we have learned to be surprised by nothing, that is, where we are not shocked by ruptures in the order.

~ Julio Cortázar

Julio Cortázar Fantastic Fantasy Genre

The fantastic cannot exist independently of that 'real' world which it seems to find frustratingly finite.

~ Rosemary Jackson

Rosemary Jackson Fantastic Fantastique Fantasy Reality

Psychic change, as Todorov has recognized, subverted the genre in another way, by revoking the cultural taboos, the social censorship, that had prohibited the overt treatment of psychosexual themes, which then found covert expression in the supernatural tale. 'There is no need today to resort to the devil [or to posthumous reverie] in order to speak of excessive sexual desire, and none to resort to vampires in order to designate the attraction exerted by corpses: psychoanalysis, and the literature which is directly or indirectly inspired by it, deal with these matters in undisguised terms. The themes of fantastic literature have become, literally, the very themes of the psychological investigations of the last fifty years.

~ Howard Kerr

Howard Kerr Devil Fantastic Fantasy Horror Psychological Psychology Supernatural Todorov Vampire

for he had acquired, as time went on, the firm conviction that any thought, even the most audacious, that any fiction, even the most insane, can one day materialize and see its fulfillment in space and time.

~ Stefan Grabiński

Stefan Grabiński Fantastic Fantasy Fiction Insanity Reality Thought

A certain atmosphere of breathless and unexplainable dread of outer, unknown forces must be present; and there must be a hint, expressed with a seriousness and portentousness becoming its subject, of that most terrible conception of the human brain - a malign and particular suspension or defeat of those laws of Nature which are our only safeguard against the assaults of chaos and the daemons of unplumbed space .... Therefore we must judge a weird tale not by the author's intent, or by the mere mechanics of the plot; but by the emotional level which it attains at its least mundane point... The one test of the really weird is simply this - whether or not there be excited in the reader a profound sense of dread, and of contact with unknown spheres and powers; a subtle attitude of awed listening, as if for the beating of black wings or the scratching of outside shapes and entities on the known universe's utmost rim.

~ H.p. Lovecraft

H.p. Lovecraft Dread Fantastic Fantasy Horror Supernatural Weird

Nevertheless, the potential and actual importance of fantastic literature lies in such psychic links: what appears to be the result of an overweening imagination, boldly and arbitrarily defying the laws of time, space and ordered causality, is closely connected with, and structured by, the categories of the subconscious, the inner impulses of man's nature. At first glance the scope of fantastic literature, free as it is from the restrictions of natural law, appears to be unlimited. A closer look, however, will show that a few dominant themes and motifs constantly recur: deals with the Devil; returns from the grave for revenge or atonement; invisible creatures; vampires; werewolves; golems; animated puppets or automatons; witchcraft and sorcery; human organs operating as separate entities, and so on. Fantastic literature is a kind of fiction that always leads us back to ourselves, however exotic the presentation; and the objects and events, however bizarre they seem, are simply externalizations of inner psychic states. This may often be mere mummery, but on occasion it seems to touch the heart in its inmost depths and become great literature.

~ Franz Rottensteiner

Franz Rottensteiner Devil Fantastic Fantastique Fantasy Genre Golem Horror Literature Sorcery Supernatural Vampire Werewolf Witchcraft

We have just begun to navigate a strange region; we must expect to encounter strange adventures, strange perils.

~ Arthur Machen

Arthur Machen Fantastic Fantasy Strange

As has already been noted, fantastic literature developed at precisely the moment when genuine belief in the supernatural was on the wane, and when the sources provided by folklore could safely be used as literary material. It is almost a necessity, for the writer as well as for the reader of fantastic literature, that he or she should not believe in the literal truth of the beings and objects described, although the preferred mode of literary expression is a naive realism. Authors of fantastic literature are, with a few exceptions, not out to convert, but to set down a narrative story endowed with the consistency and conviction of inner reality only during the time of the reading: a game, sometimes a highly serious game, with anxiety and fright, horror and terror.

~ Franz Rottensteiner

Franz Rottensteiner Fantastic Fantastique Fantasy Horror Supernatural Terror

The shifting sands of the world... show how much the surrealists were drawn towards an interrogation of what reality actually is. Unlike fabulists of whatever hue, there is a materiality in surrealist writing that resolutely keeps it, one might say, 'down to earth'.

~ Michael Richardson

Michael Richardson Fantastic Fantastique Fantasy Reality Surrealism

Supernatural fiction contains its own generic borderland: a neutral territory, which Tzvetan Todorov calls 'the fantastic,' between 'the marvelous' and 'the uncanny.' According to Todorov, 'The fantastic is that hesitation experienced by a person who knows only the laws of nature, confronting an apparently supernatural event.' Once the event is satisfactorily explained (and sometimes it is never explained), we have left the fantastic for an adjacent genre - either 'the uncanny,' where the apparently supernatural is revealed as illusory, or 'the marvelous,' where the laws of ordinary reality must be revised to incorporate the supernatural. As long as uncertainty reigns, however, we are in the ambiguous realm of the fantastic.

~ Howard Kerr

Howard Kerr Fantastic Fantasy Marvelous Supernatural Todorov Uncanny

The fantastic is always a break in the acknowledged order, an irruption of the inadmissible within the changeless everyday legality

~ Roger Caillois

Roger Caillois Fantastic Fantastique Fantasy

Many of the best fantastic stories begin in a leisurely way, set in commonplace surroundings, with exact, meticulous descriptions of an ordinary background, much as in a 'realistic' tale. Then a gradual - or it may be sometimes a shockingly abrupt - change becomes apparent, and the reader begins to realize that what is being described is alien to the world he is accustomed to, that something strange has crept or leapt into it. This strangeness changes the world permanently and fundamentally.

~ Franz Rottensteiner

Franz Rottensteiner Fantastic Fantastique Fantasy Horror Supernatural

The fantastic postulates that there are forces in the outside world, and in our own natures, which we can neither know nor control, and these forces may even constitute the essence of our existence, beneath the comforting rational surface. The fantastic is, moreover, a product of human imagination, perhaps even an excess of imagination. It arises when laws thought to be absolute are transcended, in the borderland between life and death, the animate and the inanimate, the self and the world; it arises when the real turns into the unreal, and the solid presence into vision, dream or hallucination. The fantastic is the unexpected occurrence, the startling novelty which goes contrary to all our expectations of what is possible. The ego multiplies and splits, time and space are distorted.

~ Franz Rottensteiner

Franz Rottensteiner Fantastic Fantastique Fantasy Horror Imagination Supernatural

In any event, whether a supernatural tale remains altogether fantastic or eventually modulates to the uncanny or the marvelous, the reader is faced with disconcerting ontological and perceptual problems.Indeed, the disorienting effect of the supernatural encounter in fiction seems to reflect some deeper disorientations in the culture at large.

~ Howard Kerr

Howard Kerr Fantastic Fantasy Horror Marvelous Supernatural Uncanny

It should be particularly stressed that the fantastic makes no sense in an out-and-out strange world. To imagine the fantastic in it is even impossible. In a world full of marvels the extraordinary loses its power.

~ Roger Caillois

Roger Caillois Fantastic Fantasy Genre Horror

Fantastic literature has been especially prominent in times of unrest, when the older values have been overthrown to make way for the new; it has often accompanied or predicted change, and served to shake up rational Complacency, challenging reason and reminding man of his darker nature. Its popularity has had its ups and downs, and it has always been the preserve of a small literary minority. As a natural challenger of classical values, it is rarely part of a culture's literary mainstream, expressing the spirit of the age; but it is an important dissenting voice, a reminder of the vast mysteries of existence, sometimes truly metaphysical in scope, but more often merely riddling.

~ Franz Rottensteiner

Franz Rottensteiner Fantastic Fantastique Fantasy Genre Horror Literature Supernatural

(Washington) Irving was only the first of the writers of the American ghostly tale to recognize that the supernatural, exactly because its epistemological status is so difficult to determine, challenged the writer to invent a commensurately sophisticated narrative technique.

~ Howard Kerr

Howard Kerr Fantastic Fantasy Ghost Stories Ghost Story Horror Supernatural Wasington Irving

But the recurrent ambiguity of the American tale of the supernatural reveals both a fascination with the possibility of numinous experience and a perplexity about whether there was, in fact, anything numinous to be experienced. Writers often delighted in leading readers into, but not out of, the haunted dusk of the borderland.

~ Howard Kerr

Howard Kerr Fantastic Fantasy Horror Numinous Supernatural

The fantastic in literature doesn't exist as a challenge to what is probable, but only there where it can be increased to a challenge of reason itself: the fantastic in literature consists, when all has been said, essentially in showing the world as opaque, as inaccessible to reason on principle. This happens when Piranesi in his imagined prisons depicts a world peopled by other beings than those for which it was created. (On the Fantastic in Literature)

~ Lars Gustafsson

Lars Gustafsson Fantastic Fantastique Fantasy Genre Reason

The fantastic is in complicity with the realist model, in the claims that realism makes to represent the true face of reality. It points to the gaps and inadequacies of realism, but does not question the legitimacy of its claims to represent reality. The concept of “suspension of disbelief', that beloved criterion of positivist criticism supposedly serving to establish the legitimacy of the fantastic, confirms this hegemony.

~ Michael Richardson

Michael Richardson Fantastic Fantastique Fantasy Realism

Refusing what Adorno called that 'comfort in the uncomfortable' taken by the fantastic, surrealism seeks to reintegrate man into the universe.

~ Michael Richardson

Michael Richardson Fantastic Fantasy Surrealism Universe

(Uncle) would remark that it was impossible to get by without such a (portentous and whimsical) tone when speaking of many things of this world, and especially of the things not entirely of this world.

~ Vladimir Odoyevsky

Vladimir Odoyevsky Fantastic Fantasy Humor

Come! our world is done:For all the witchery of the world is fled,And lost all wanton wisdom long since won.

~ Lionel Pigot Johnson

Lionel Pigot Johnson Fantastic Fantasy

Paranoia. The more you think of an imaginary problem, the more you feel as though it’s real –

~ Simona Panova

Simona Panova Afraid Cardew Dread Fake False Fantastic Fantasy Fear Freya Gothic Gothic Romance Horrified Horror Imaginary Imagination Imagine Imagined Lie Lies Love Story Mystery Nightmare Nightmarish Nightmarish Sacrifice Paranoia Paranoid Pretend Problem Real Reality Romance Sacrifice Scared Suspense True Truth Young Adult

Inevitably, his vision verged toward the fantastic; he published a scattering of stories - most included in this volume - which appeared to conform to that genre at least to the degree that the fuller part of his vision could be seen as mysteries. For Woolrich it all was fantastic; the clock in the tower, hand in the glove, out of control vehicle, errant gunshot which destroyed; whether destructive coincidence was masked in the naturalistic or the incredible was all pretty much the same to him. RENDEZVOUS IN BLACK, THE BRIDE WORE BLACK, NIGHTMARE are all great swollen dreams, turgid constructions of the night, obsession and grotesque outcome; to turn from these to the fantastic was not to turn at all. The work, as is usually the case with a major writer was perfectly formed, perfectly consistent, the vision leached into every area and pulled the book together. Jane Brown's Body is a suspense story. THE BRIDE WORE BLACK is science fiction. PHANTOM LADY is a gothic. RENDEZVOUS IN BLACK was a bildungsroman. It does not matter.

~ Barry N. Malzberg

Barry N. Malzberg Bildungsroman Cornell Woolrich Fantastic Gothic Horror Noir Noir Fiction Science Fiction Suspense

Henry,' at last said one, again dipping the spoon into the flaming spirit, 'hast thou read Hoffman?''I should think so,' said Henry.'What think you of him?''Why, that he writes admirably; and, moreover, what is more admirable - in such a manner that you see at once he almost believes that which he relates. As for me, I know very well that when I read him of a dark night, I am obliged to creep to bed without shutting my book, and without daring to look behind me.''Indeed; then you love the terrible and fantastic?''I do,' said Henry. (The Dead Man's Story

~ James Hain Friswell

James Hain Friswell E T A Hoffmann Eta Hoffmann Fantastic Fantastique Fear Horror Horror Story Terrible Terror

It was like when we were little kids and we played games on the ivy-covered hillside in the backyard. We were warriors and wizards and angels and high elves and that was our reality. If someone said, Isn’t it cute, look at them playing, we would have smiled back, humoring them, but it wasn’t playing. It was transformation. It was our own world. Our own rules.

~ Francesca Lia Block

Francesca Lia Block Child Childhood Children Fantasies Fantastic Fantasy Game Games Playing Playing Games Pretend Pretending Reality
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