Stories and Fiction
Copyright © 2020 MC
In Fiction the story is comprised either of the author’s imagination or is real but used fictitiously. A story about President George W. Bush (called “W”) had real events in it, but the story is fictional. A true story is a Documentary. A story about September 11, 2001 may have real events in it, but the story is fiction. Used Fictitiously: means it is used in a fictional way, by inventing events or ideas that are not based on, or not real, items. A story about Child Wizards (Harry Potter series) is fiction unless there are real Child Wizards in life who live in a real place called Hogwarts. Historical Fiction is about historical people or events but used in a fictional setting with fictional ideas, speech, narration, etc. Homer’s Iliad is Historical Fiction about the events in the Trojan War. Its characters may not have existed in reality. The Bible/Quran are both Fictional, but used in a religion for the purpose of establishing Belief (Belief is necessary to will events). Eye of the Pharaoh is Science Fiction. Real characters like King Tutankhamon, the author, and the author’s information is added to the story for realism. The story never happened. The original Publisher (Karen Weill) misrepresented the book when she published it after 1991 as a “true story.” Her primitive, human mind didn’t comprehend the story when she compared it to the private Psycho-therapy sessions I had with her about my past life of Tutankhamon, so she assumed it was a real story. She also didn’t read all of it, especially chapter 19 which said the book is Science Fiction. I am not a liar. She said that. Science Fiction is a form of Fiction with Scientific principals or laws, as in Outer Space, aliens, Time Travel, Dimensional Laws, Metaphysics, etc. Science Fiction allows for thinking in Scientific ways or to teach Science using stories. Fantasy is highly imaginative Fiction, like in the Lord of the Rings, Star Wars, or other films.
© MC 2020
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