
Gray from Fairy Tail
I realized that I haven’t talked about magic for a long time. I write fantasy books, so I should bring it up from time to time. With Darwin’s adventures not being published any time soon, I don’t want to use him as an example. Instead, I’m curious to see what people think about magic. Enjoy.
- What do you want from magic in a story?
- If you could cast one spell, what would you cast?
- How has your thoughts on magic changed as you get older?




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I’ve found that the unlimited at no cost only works when everyone has it. At least give some fatigue after use though. I haven’t run into much of the deconstruction thing. Is that like the magic is proven to be fake?
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Yes. I’ve seen stories of fake wizards but also retellings that are thinly veiled ripped-from-today’s headlines storylines that take the wonder out of the fantasy element. Almost like a cynical version of a fantasy story. I’m not saying that can’t work or that these stories don’t have fans. But I still like a good fantasy story with captivating magic.
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There is a trend of making magic more realistic. That seems to defeat the purpose. Fake wizards became more popular after that Oz movie revolving around the ‘Wizard’ came out.
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Nothing against fake wizards either if the story is good–like Terry Pratchett good.
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I would like magic to take me somewhere I’ve never been. It could be an emotion, place, ot time.
I would cast a spell of invisibility. Unless it was snowing it would give me a big advantage
I used to think magic in stories was somewhat of a cop-out to solve issues. Now I believe it is an enhancement.
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Invisibility sounds fun. Though I’m now always worried that people would run into me.
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Gotta be light on your feet.
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I want the magical element to give me that escapism I am looking for. Not to overwhelm a story, but to make it different from my dreary world. These days I’d cast a money or luck spell. As I get older I’ve learned to appreciate those who can deliver the whole experience and keep me from asking why they didn’t just magic away the problems.
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A luck spell sounds like a good idea. That could end up having positive global implications too.
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Darwin fully supports your second answer. 😁
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In fantasy, there’s no real point to magic if the characters can do anything with it. Come to think of it, there’s no story in that case. A problem? No worries. Just magic it away. There has to be some limitations.
What spell would I like? A calming spell that would work on angry people and distressed people.
I’m not quite sure what you mean by your last question. Your other commenters have interpreted it differently from me.
Anyway, when I was little, I believed magic was real. Fairies existed, and other magical creatures. Of course, as I grew, I discovered that the magic I believed in didn’t exist. But, as my tagline on my website says, ‘There is magic in the world if only you look for it.’
Some magical things: a lovely spring morning with the birds singing and the flowers blooming; the rare sight of the Milky Way in all its glory; the birth of a child (or any new creature); the way everything fits together in nature; the way a kind word lifts the spirits.
So much magic around and we don’t notice it.
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The last question was open to personal interpretation since not everyone believed in magic as a child. Figured people will translate it to what they wanted.
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