Name the Darkness to Rise Above It

hobbits hidingGot my copy of N. D. Wilson’s Outlaws of Time: The Legend of Sam Miracle yesterday, and I’m looking forward to spending some quality time with it this weekend.  Wilson has had at least one article and one interview pop up in the media the last few days.  The article, “Why I Write Scary Stories for Children” is a well-rendered piece.  And while it revisits earlier themes of his work, the article moves things forward well by personalizing the topic of why he writes children’s books with a darker edge.  Consider:

There is absolutely a time and a place for The Pokey Little Puppy and Barnyard Dance, just like there’s a time and a place for footie pajamas. But as children grow, fear and danger and terror grow with them, courtesy of the world in which we live and the very real existence of shadows. The stories on which their imaginations feed should empower a courage and bravery stronger than whatever they are facing. And if what they are facing is truly and horribly awful (as is the case for too many kids), then fearless sacrificial friends walking their own fantastical (or realistic) dark roads to victory can be a very real inspiration and help.

I particularly like the story of how he handled his oldest son’s issue with the White Witch’s minions in the Narnia books.  And then later:

I don’t write horror. But I do write stories about terrified sheltered kids and fatherless kids and kids with the ghosts of abuse in their pasts. Those kids encounter horrors—witches and swamp monsters, black magical doors and undying villains, mad scientists and giant cheese-loving snapping turtles. Those kids feel real pain, described in real ways. They feel real loss. They learn that the truest victory comes from standing in the right place and doing the right thing against all odds, even if doing the right thing means losing everything. Even if doing the right thing means death. My characters live in worlds that are fundamentally beautiful and magical, just like ours, in worlds that are broken and brutal, just like ours. And, when characters live courageously and sacrificially, good will ultimately triumph over evil.

I think the strong, almost tangible, presence of evil in stories like The Lord of the Rings and the Harry Potter books is what grants them such impact.  But it’s also a risky move to make, as you (literally) don’t want to scare readers (or viewers) away.

It’s a great article.  You can read it in its entirety here.

I’ll let you know how the book is after I finish it.

(image from theonering.net)

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