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by nottorp
356 days ago
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> versus fiction in a fantastical world or a "real world" where the existence of magicâ„¢ must be extensively explained. Well now if we're drifting, I don't consider "fantasy" has to explain everything like it were an AD&D manual. Take Glen Cook's Black Company series where magic just happens without explanation. Compare with something like Brandon Sanderson who describes "magic systems" in great detail always. I find the former enticing and the latter boring. Lord of the Rings didn't explain anything either. |
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Yeah, and LOTR is in Middle-Earth, a fantastical world that isn't Earth. The point of the term "magical realism" is that there is still "realism". It's about what happens when something impossible or absurd happens to you and you have to deal with the ramifications in the real world. No one would read The Satanic Verses, think about the themes involved and compare it to LOTR.