Much as I enjoy being tagged, doing tags, and tagging other bloggers, I don’t get around to it that often! Maybe it’s because I sheepishly feel like I’m not offering real content when I do one?* So it’s with an even more sheepish grin today that I dust off not one, but two fantasy-themed tags that have been sitting in my drafts for a while. The always lovely Deborah O’Carroll passed on the Life Lessons Learned from Fantasy tag a WHOLE YEAR AGO. (#oops) And the recently-featured-here-because-she-just-released-a-new-book Jenelle Schmidt tagged me just last month for the What If…? Fantasy Tag. Thanks, you two!
*How do you guys feel about that, anyway?
Both tags actually originated with Jenelle, who invented February is Fantasy Month! . . . Yes, we are ignoring the fact that it is now March. In true fantasy style, I am being a wizard who is never late but arrives precisely when she intends to. So there.
Let’s jump right in, shall we?
Life Lessons Learned from Fantasy
Rules
1. Link back to Jenelle’s blog. (Done.)
2. Use the image above. (Also done.)
3. Tell us 5-10 lessons you’ve learned from reading a fantasy book (or watching a fantasy movie)–lessons can come from multiple sources as well, of course. (Coming right up!)
4. Tag 2-4 other bloggers. (Shall do at the end of the post.)
Life Lesson #1: I can make a difference.
A hobbit from the Shire had no special strength, but Frodo carried the One Ring to Mordor. A little girl was the youngest in her family, but Lucy discovered Narnia and saw Aslan when no one else did. A mute young woman was enslaved by a culture of oppression, but Imraldera’s influence stretched over many lands and many ages.
Over and over, fantasy shows me the weak, the small, the powerless, and the ordinary rise up to become heroes. Yes, their heroics are often on a kingdom-wide scale, larger than life for all to see. But they inspire me to make my own life count.
“Some believe it is only great power that can hold evil in check, but that is not what I have found. It is the small everyday deeds of ordinary folk that keep the darkness at bay. Small acts of kindness and love. Why Bilbo Baggins? Perhaps because I am afraid, and he gives me courage.” -Gandalf
Life Lesson #2: Life is full of wonder.
The moment my imagination set foot on infant Narnian soil and heard Aslan singing the world to life, I was enraptured as I had never been before. And every well-drawn fantasy world since then has kept alive my spark of childlike wonder. Mountains, oceans, valleys, forests. Portals, ley lines, magic hiding around every corner. Vast landscapes flung farther than I can see, all ripe for exploration. I sometimes wonder if these flashes of longing and delight are little tastes of the wonders we’ll see in heaven.
Life Lesson #3: The darkness does not last.
Fantasy offers a vivid canvas on which to paint the brightest of colors and the blackest of shadows. The suffering our beloved heroes endure is staggering. Sapphira Adi, confined to the lonely underground for centuries (Eye of the Oracle, Bryan Davis) . . . Nym, her powers stripped right from her bones (Siren’s Fury, Mary Weber) . . . the entire Rampion crew, separated and struggling to make headway against the Lunar Queen (Winter, Marrisa Meyer) . . . Frodo and Sam, beaten down to their last breaths on the slopes of Mount Doom (The Return of the King, JRR Tolkien) . . . Cal Raven, his people homeless and his own faith shaken from its holdings (The Ale Boy’s Feast, Jeffrey Overstreet) . . . I could go on and on.
But in all my favorite fantasy stories, no matter how deep the darkness becomes and no matter how long it lasts, light breaks through. Sapphira Adi finds hope in Elohim. Nym discovers a power that no one can take from her. The Rampion crew finds love and victory. Frodo and Sam find the strength to carry on and put an end to a great evil. Cal Raven makes a home and reclaims his faith.
Weeping may last through the night, but joy comes with the morning. (Psalm 30:5)
Life Lesson #4: God is recklessly in love with me.
Allegorical fantasy is still one of my favorites, and there are so many books under that category that have refreshed my view of God. In Anne Elisabeth Stengl’s
Heartless, I see Aethelbald redeem me. In Ted Dekker’s Circle series, I drown in Elohim’s waters and emerge reborn. In
The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe, I witness Aslan’s sacrifice firsthand. In Wayne Thomas Batson’s
The Door Within, King Eliam’s glory blinds me.
All of these stories and more open my eyes to more facets of God’s character. And always I am drawn in by His wild, untamed, unreserved love. He’s not a tame lion, you know.
Life Lesson #5: In the end, we win.
Fantasy is the genre in which a happily ever after is the norm. There may be bloodshed, scars, and sorrows, but in the end, good prevails. The enemy armies may be innumerable, but in the end, they fall. Fantasy rekindles my hope. We are on the winning side. The enemy is already defeated. And one day, we’re going home.
***
The What If . . . ? Fantasy Tag
Rules
1. Thank the blogger who tagged you. (Thanks again!)
2. Include the graphic somewhere in your post. (See above.)
3. Answer the questions. (In a sec!)
4. Tag a few bloggers–and let them know they’ve been tagged. (Coming at the end.)
5. Have fun! (That would be impossible to avoid.)
1. Your car breaks down in the middle of nowhere. The cast of the most recent fantasy book you’ve read comes to your assistance . . . Who are they? Will they be helpful?
Whew, I’m in luck! The book I’m currently reading, Bryan Davis’s Circles of Seven, is urban fantasy with a twist, so at least most of the characters are familiar with modern inventions. Billy and Walter should have no trouble fixing my car, especially with Karen around, since she’s a car expert. Not to mention Ashley’s super smart. Bonnie can fly ahead to see where we are (and where the nearest mechanic is), while Shiloh keeps me company and Professor Hamilton regales me with Arthurian legend.
But if Clefspeare or Hartanna are around, I say we ditch the car and go for a dragon flight!
2. You go to bed one evening and wake up in the lair of the villain of the last fairytale you read. Where are you and how do you plan to get out?
I’m not sure what fairytale I’ve read most recently, but the latest fairytale retelling is probably The Tomb of the Sea Witch by Kyle Robert Schultz.
In which case I’m underwater and will probably drown in the next thirty seconds.
My plan is to accept my fate. I’ll spend the rest of my days as a ghost wandering the halls of the Warrengate Academy of Advanced Magic. Perhaps I can haunt Malcolm the dragon every now and then . . . it’d be fun to scare him without fear of getting fried.
3. You are transported into a fantasy realm and given a mythical creature as a companion and best friend . . . Which mythical creature do you get?
The answer is quite obvious. NEXT QUESTION.
Oh, wait. You really don’t know? A dragon, of course! Because although the blog’s sidebar does say I might have one living in my basement, that dragon might be a figment of my imagination. Who knows? Either way, I need a real dragon bestie in my life.
4. In a strange series of coincidences, you end up needing to take the place of your favorite fantasy hero or heroine. Who are you?
“A strange series of coincidences”–does that kind of sound like a spinoff to A Series of Unfortunate Events?
But oh boy, this is a tough one. I’m going to fall back on a long-time favorite: Sir Eanrin from Tales of Goldstone Wood! While the term “hero” may be debatable at some points in his life, the sometimes-man, sometimes-cat is really a noble character deep down beneath his preening, poetry, and pride. (My my, the alliteration is flowing already.)

5. To go along with question #4, now that you are that character, is there anything you would do differently than that character, now that you are running the show?
Um, YES. TELL IMRALDERA I* LOVE AND ADORE HER. And that is all I will say on the subject.
*he? you? Am I talking about Eanrin, to Eanrin, or about myself as Eanrin?
6. If you were yourself in a fantasy novel, what role do you think you would play in the story?
I’d be the sidekick on the quest, the one who packs too many books, gives the heroes regular pep talks to keep their spirits up, and surprises everyone with a fiery verbal barrage against injustice.
But if I lived long enough, I would likely take up a profession as the village crazy person. You know, the mysterious kind who lives in a house crammed full of scrolls, knick knacks, dust, and half an apothecary–the eccentric old woman whose nonsense occasionally hides a scrap of wisdom.
7. One morning, as you are going about your daily business, you pick up an everyday item and a voice booms in your head with prophetic words about your future. What object is it, and what is the prophecy?
It is my phone, a companion that’s a little too constant. And the prophecy that echoes in my head is:
Three for Goodreads stats falling behind
Seven for games with endless levels
Nine for Instagram photos divine
One for emails like Hydra devils
In the land of pixels where distractions lie.
One phone to rule them all, one phone to find them,
One phone to bring them all and in the appstore bind them.
In the land of pixels where distractions lie.
(I butchered the meter, but that’s what you get for writing parody poetry after staying up too late watching a movie.) (Anyway, all that to say I’m trying to work on my phone habits!)
8. You are transported into a magical realm and turned into a mythical beast . . . What beast/fantasy creature do you want to be?
A DRAGON. Oh, right, I already used that one for #3.
How about a shape shifter? Then I can take the form of anything I want, dragon included! I mean, talk about convenient. I could swim with the mermaids, fly with the phoenixes / griffins / Pegasi* / dragons / etc., and infiltrate any castle in the kingdom. But if shape shifter wasn’t an option, I would settle for being a talking fox, like the one in The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe movie.
*what’s the plural for Pegasus, anyway?
9. If you could read your way into any fantasy realm, but the catch is you can never leave, would you? Which realm would you choose?
Oh dear, don’t do this to me. This sort of question makes me start needling around for loopholes and exceptions. Like, if I could take my family with me, I would pick . . . or, if I could still communicate with people on earth, I’d choose . . .
If such gracious allowances were truly forbidden, then no. I wouldn’t read my way into a fantasy realm, because as massively tempting as it would be, I couldn’t leave my fam jam behind! Buuuut if we can stretch the rules a little, I would pick Narnia hands down. It has the perfect blend of wonder, beauty, and just the right amount of danger to make for great adventures. (I would get stabbed very quickly in a place like Middle Earth, okay.)
Hmm . . . the longer I think about it, though, the more I like the thought of living in one of the realms of my own making. Iror would be lovely, or Demetria . . .
Okay, okay, I’ll stop! My answer is Narnia, but only if I can take people with me.
10. As you are going about your normal day, you discover that you have a magical power. What is it?
A super brain that learns ridiculously fast and retains it all would make college a breeze! But that sounds a little bit more like superhero/sci-fi stuff than fantasy, so . . . I think it would be cool to see an “aura” around people. Kind of a way to read their emotions, which is less intrusive than reading minds but would probably be quite helpful. Is there a name for that sort of thing? If no one’s written a book about it yet, maybe I’ll have to.
***
Whew, that got longer than I expected! I should’ve known that fantasy + books = much to talk about. And now it’s time to tag some people to pass on the fun. I’m going to do something different and tag some of my newest followers. Feel free to take it or leave it, guys! (Either one or both of them.) If you do take them, leave me a link so I can check it out!
I tag:
Anyone else who started following Adventure Awaits within the last three months!
(I wanted to tag more of you, but couldn’t find links to your blogs on your profiles.)
Well, that about wraps it up! What are some things you’ve learned from fantasy? Whose lair would you be escaping? Would you read yourself irreversibly into a fantasy realm???