Fairies & Fae Audiolibro Por M C Neuffer arte de portada

Fairies & Fae

A Writer's Complete Guide to the Fae in Lore, Literature, and Fiction Craft

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Fairies & Fae

De: M C Neuffer
Narrado por: Virtual Voice
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The fairy is not a childhood fancy. It is one of the most persistent, cross-cultural, psychologically grounded figures in human imagination — and it has been waiting for writers who know how to use it.

495 pages in textbook format

Fairies & Fae: Lore, Literature, and the Writer's Craft
is the comprehensive reference guide for fiction writers who want to go beyond surface mythology and work with the fairy tradition the way its greatest practitioners — Yeats, Tolkien, Holly Black, Charles de Lint — have always worked with it: from the inside out, with authority and respect.

Fairies and Fae are not what you think they are.
Before Tinkerbell. Before Disney. Before the flower fairies of Victorian illustration, there were older things in the hills. Beautiful, terrible, operating by their own unforgiving rules, indifferent to human concerns in the way that the very old and very powerful are indifferent. This is the fairy tradition that writers working at the highest level of the genre have always known. Fairies and Fae gives every fiction writer the keys to writing in that tradition.
Drawing on anthropology, folklore, neurology, literary history, and the craft of fiction itself, this book traces fairy mythology from its roots in the Celtic heartland through Norse, Germanic, Asian, African, and indigenous American traditions revealing the cross-cultural patterns that make the fairy one of the most durable and psychologically potent figures in world mythology.

What you'll find here:
  • The deep psychology behind fairy belief, Why the human mind, across every culture and century, has needed to populate the liminal spaces of experience with beings that operate by their own alien logic
  • The world map — Celtic Sidhe and Seelie Courts, Norse alfar, Arabian jinn, Japanese yōkai, African spirit traditions and their diaspora transformations, with specific attention to what makes each tradition distinct and what it offers writers
  • The Rulebook — iron, bargains, names, fairy food, time distortion, and the other cross-cultural laws that define fairy beings, with analysis of why these rules feel universally true and how to use them without making them feel mechanical
  • The darkness — the changeling, the fairy lover, the Wild Hunt, the Fairy Queen, and the traditions that serious modern fiction has reclaimed from Victorian sanitization
  • The history — from Shakespeare's watershed treatment in A Midsummer Night's Dream through Spenser, the Victorian catastrophe, Yeats, Tolkien, and the current romantasy explosion
  • The hoaxes — the Cottingley Affair, the Fairy Investigation Society, P.T. Barnum to internet memes, and the anatomy of why we want to be fooled
  • The craft — a dedicated section on building internally consistent fairy rule systems, writing genuinely alien fairy characters, using court structures as plot engines, and signaling to readers what kind of fairy story they're in
This is not a beginner's guide to fantasy tropes. It is an authoritative reference for fiction writers who want to work with the fairy tradition at full depth — recovering the power that was there before the miniaturization, before the wings, before the belief that fairies exist to delight children. That older tradition is darker, stranger, and far more useful to serious storytelling.
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