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Samuel Peterson
is on page 78 of 480
"The business of the storyteller, or the novelist, it seems to me, is with the path and not the wood." Exactly. The amount of the woods that we as readers should see should only be what is along the path of the story. We as readers should not have a path that disappears or is vague and undefined that it takes us a while to get back on. It should be focused and clear.
— 9 hours, 15 min ago
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Samuel Peterson
is on page 69 of 480
"Different kinds of stories expect different kinds of audience and certain kinds of attitudes from that audience." All too true. And this does not just apply to creation stories from around the world, but also lectures, both academic and religious, and the ones we write down.
— 10 hours, 15 min ago
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Samuel Peterson
is on page 62 of 480
Describing "heaven's armies" digging mines for metal, creating guns, and using them on devils makes this depiction of Lucifer's fall quite hilarious in its contemporary-ness. You don't hear of this in the Catholic Catechisms or other liturgical teachings lol.
— 10 hours, 31 min ago
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Samuel Peterson
is on page 49 of 480
Imagine if school children today read Milton's "Paradise Lost" in class? Lol. Seems to have been a loss for everyone.
— 14 hours, 15 min ago
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Samuel Peterson
is on page 46 of 480
Sellotape? Is that the British equivalent of scotch tape? And is that where J.K. Rowling got the inspiration for "Spellotape" in Harry Potter? After over 10 years of reading HP, I finally made that connection!
— 14 hours, 25 min ago
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Samuel Peterson
is on page 45 of 480
Learning about the theme of His Dark Materials makes me want to read it now. But it is also inspiring me to reflect on the them of my own series and put it into focus.
— 14 hours, 28 min ago
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Samuel Peterson
is on page 42 of 480
"And the first result of [Adam and Eve] eating the fruit was embarrassment. They knew they were naked; it hadn't occurred to them before. Knowledge comes with a cost...But once they had eaten the fruit, consciousness was open to them, and with consciousness came self-consciousness, awkwardness, embarrassment, sorrow, grief, and pain." Either we must be innocent of the world, or become wise to it.
— 14 hours, 51 min ago
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Samuel Peterson
is on page 37 of 480
"Readers—especially an audience that includes young readers—aren't in the least interested in you, and your self-conscious post-modernist anguish about all the things there are to be anguished about when it comes to text. They want to know what happened next."
Thank you! I would like to know if Pullman does writers' conferences now and if he still says these things. If he does, it's likely he's not invited anymore.
— 15 hours, 29 min ago
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Thank you! I would like to know if Pullman does writers' conferences now and if he still says these things. If he does, it's likely he's not invited anymore.
Samuel Peterson
is on page 36 of 480
Unlike these kids that Pullman taught, dialogue is harder for me to write compared to descriptive language.
— 15 hours, 34 min ago
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Samuel Peterson
is on page 34 of 480
"So my heresy is to suggest that eternal life is not a reward, but the most cruel punishment, imposed on us by God for the sin of seeking to grow up and become wise." Oof, I can see why some Christians would have a problem with this author.
— 16 hours, 33 min ago
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Samuel Peterson
is on page 33 of 480
"'I must create my own system, or be enslaved by another man's'" This is why it's important to know your influences, recognize you're being influenced by another person's ideas, and with that recognition and clarity, you can make the choice to either follow through on that other person's ideas or continue with telling the story that you want to tell.
— 16 hours, 37 min ago
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Samuel Peterson
is on page 31 of 480
"This is not a story about how wonderful it was to be a child, and its dominating principle is not nostalgia and regret. It's a story about how necessary it is to grow up, and its dominating principle is realism and hope." Some would say that this is in contrast to C.S. Lewis's themes in the Chronicles of Narnia, especially when it came to the later books.
— 16 hours, 43 min ago
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Samuel Peterson
is on page 31 of 480
"Innocence is not wise; wisdom cannot be innocent. And it's very painful and it's very hard, but it's the only way forward, and in the end, if we keep trying, we shall have acquired a deeper, fuller, richer understanding than we ever had before we tasted the fruit of the knowledge of good and evil." Very poignant.
— May 06, 2026 12:25PM
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Samuel Peterson
is on page 23 of 480
"'Where do I put the camera?' I think that's the very basic storytelling question. Where do you see the scene from? What do you tell the reader about it? What's your stance toward the characters?" Again, going back to that essential question of what is your focus? There should be no unnecessary meandering or distractions from the focus of these characters. They should be the focus, not something chewing the scenery.
— May 06, 2026 09:44AM
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Samuel Peterson
is on page 21 of 480
"Now this can be paralysing, if you're not careful. If you let the thought of all the things you could say get the upper hand, it becomes very hard to say anything." I'm reminded of when SpongeBob was assigned a written assignment and he just sat there unsure of what to write. He spent more time trying to begin with "the" than anything else.
— May 06, 2026 09:36AM
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Samuel Peterson
is on page 16 of 480
"I suppose one's last and most responsible act as the servant of the story is to know when one can do no more, and when it's time to admit that someone else's eyes might see it more clearly. To become so grand that you refuse to let your work be edited—and we can all think of a few writers who got to that point—is to be a bad servant, not a good one." Very true.
— May 06, 2026 08:04AM
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Samuel Peterson
is on page 13 of 480
"'We have been studying obituaries in school and we have to write an obituary of someone famous and I would like to do you. Could you tell me how you would like to die and can you make it as dramatic as possible?'" I can imagine the laughter from the audience when the author shared this child's letter. That's funny.
— May 06, 2026 07:56AM
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Samuel Peterson
is on page 8 of 480
"Next in my list of responsibilities comes honesty—emotional honesty. We should never try to draw on emotional credit to which our story is not entitled...I read a novel that gratuitously introduced a Holocaust theme. The theme had nothing to do with the story—it was there for one purpose only, which is to force a particular response and then graft it onto the book. Stories should earn their tears and not pilfer them
— May 06, 2026 07:35AM
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Samuel Peterson
is on page 7 of 480
"The aim must always be clarity...It's much better to write in such a way that the reader can see all the way down...Telling a story involves thinking of some interesting events, putting them in the best order to bring out the connections between them, and telling them as clearly as we can." No meanderings, no side-commentaries, no beating off the track. I get bored and fall asleep when the focus is elsewhere.
— May 06, 2026 07:29AM
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Samuel Peterson
is on page 5 of 480
"But if we find we can make money by writing books, by telling stories, we have the responsibility—the responsibility to our families, and those we look after—of doing it well and as profitably as we can." This sentiment is certainly not shared by some modern writers, especially those who are political activists in regards to their writing. They don't write to make money, they write to send a message.
— May 06, 2026 07:21AM
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Samuel Peterson
is starting
After the "Fantasy Character Creator" book, I'm interested to see what this book provides. From the sound of it, there's more essays, which reminds me of when I read Joseph Campbell's "Hero's Journey." Hopefully it's not as dry as that.
— May 06, 2026 06:30AM
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