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Fantastic poetry
Broader Term
Related resource
Quinn, E. A dictionary of literary and thematic terms, c1999 (Fantasy: A form of literature characterized by highly imaginative or supernatural events.)
Saricks, J. Readers' advisory guide to genre fiction, 2009: pp. 265-267 (Fantasy: Fantasy exists in a world that most people believe never could be, while Science Fiction worlds are those we accept as possible, even if improbable. Science Fiction generally offers something radically new and different, but Fantasy frequently takes a familiar story, legend, or myth and adds a twist, a new way of looking at things that brings it to life again. The key to Fantasy, however, is the presence of magic)
The poetic fantastic, 1989: p. xii (Fantastic poems range in the material they treat from the strange but explainable to the utterly fanciful, from horror to wonder, and from the rigidly verisimilitudinous to the purely surrealist. They may utilize traditional prosody or may avail themselves of the discontinuities and fragmentation of modernist free verse. They may use as setting the primary world, a secondary word, or a combination of the two.)
Genre terms for the Children's book & play review viewed via the website of the Harold B. Lee Library, Brigham Young University, Jan. 14, 2013 (Fantasy poetry: Used for poetry that features imaginary worlds, extraordinary creatures, sorcerers, epic quests, or magic.)
Bergmann, F.J. What is this thing called genre poetry, in Verse Wisconsin online, issue 102, viewed on Jan. 14, 2013 (Fantasy poetry--whose core concepts are based on magic rather than technology, or derived from myths or fairy tales)
Hidden places, secret words : an anthology of fantasy poetry, c1980.
GSAFD, 2000 (Fantasy poetry)
LCSH, Oct. 22, 2014 (Fantasy poetry)
Saricks, J. Readers' advisory guide to genre fiction, 2009: pp. 265-267 (Fantasy: Fantasy exists in a world that most people believe never could be, while Science Fiction worlds are those we accept as possible, even if improbable. Science Fiction generally offers something radically new and different, but Fantasy frequently takes a familiar story, legend, or myth and adds a twist, a new way of looking at things that brings it to life again. The key to Fantasy, however, is the presence of magic)
The poetic fantastic, 1989: p. xii (Fantastic poems range in the material they treat from the strange but explainable to the utterly fanciful, from horror to wonder, and from the rigidly verisimilitudinous to the purely surrealist. They may utilize traditional prosody or may avail themselves of the discontinuities and fragmentation of modernist free verse. They may use as setting the primary world, a secondary word, or a combination of the two.)
Genre terms for the Children's book & play review viewed via the website of the Harold B. Lee Library, Brigham Young University, Jan. 14, 2013 (Fantasy poetry: Used for poetry that features imaginary worlds, extraordinary creatures, sorcerers, epic quests, or magic.)
Bergmann, F.J. What is this thing called genre poetry, in Verse Wisconsin online, issue 102, viewed on Jan. 14, 2013 (Fantasy poetry--whose core concepts are based on magic rather than technology, or derived from myths or fairy tales)
Hidden places, secret words : an anthology of fantasy poetry, c1980.
GSAFD, 2000 (Fantasy poetry)
LCSH, Oct. 22, 2014 (Fantasy poetry)
Note
Poems in which magic and extraordinary characters are integral to the story.
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