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The Classics


Christian speculative fiction is not new in the modern era. It has been around for centuries. Back in the day, anything that would qualify as speculative fiction would've probably been at least nominally Christian because that's the way the culture was. At least nominally.

The novels I've been looking at are those published since 1986 when This Present Darkness released. But where would any of us be if we couldn't stand on the shoulders of those who have gone before?

Here are a few of the classics.



G. K. Chesterton
I've not read this, but a site guest says it's "super-bizarre spec fiction by a wonderful Christian author of past generations."
   
The Man Who Was Thursday


Madeleine L'Engle
The Granddame of Christian speculative fiction.
   A Wrinkle in Time
   A Wind in the Door
   A Swiftly Tilting Planet
   Many Waters


C. S. Lewis
Here's another guy who needs no introduction. Most people know of Lewis's Chronicles of Narnia, but not everyone knows of his Space Trilogy. It's heady stuff, completely speculative and utterly Christian. And the last two are classics, especially Screwtape. It's a must-read.
   The Lion, The Witch and the Wardrobe
   The Horse and His Boy
   Prince Caspian
   The Magician's Nephew
   The Voyage of the "Dawn Treader"
   The Silver Chair
   The Last Battle
   Out of the Silent Planet
   Perelandra
   That Hideous Strength
   The Screwtape Letters
   The Great Divorce


George MacDonald
MacDonald is considered by many to be the first Christian speculative novelist of the "modern" (19th century) period. Writers like Tolkien and Lewis were no doubt influenced by his writings.
   Phantastes
   Lilith


J. R. R. Tolkein
Like I have to introduce Tolkien, the man who basically invented the modern fantasy genre. Tolkien's Catholic faith certainly informed his speculative fiction, but I do not believe he had any direct allegorical purpose in mind when he wrote of Middle-Earth. Tolkien's trilogy pretty much singlehandedly made me decide to become a novelist. There are powers at work in his fiction that resonate on a level far deeper than allegory. This is the stuff of myth and human archetype. Note that this is not a complete listing of Tolkien's works, and it is certainly not a complete listing of all the editions of his works, or books about his works. Just have fun browsing!
   The Hobbit
   The Lord of the Rings
   The Two Towers
   The Return of the King
   The Silmarillion
   Unfinished Tales
   Sir Gawain and the Green Knight
   The War of the Ring
   The Book of Lost Tales 1
   The Book of Lost Tales, Part Two
   The Return of the Shadow
   Smith of Wootton Major & Farmer Giles of Ham
   The Children of Hurin


Charles Williams
One of the Inklings, with C.S. Lewis and J.R.R. Tolkien.
   War in Heaven, A Novel
   All Hallow's Eve
   Place of the Lion
   Descent Into Hell, a Novel

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