It's hard to write in times like these. Hard to speak. But there is something inexplicable in the written word, something ineffable. Fiction and poetry are the canvases on which we paint our hopes and dread. In systems that would silence us, writers scream with the scribbling of pens, the soft clacking of keyboards. "Writers are among the most sensitive, the most intellectually anarchic, most representative, most probing of artists," Toni Morrison once wrote. "The ability of writers to imagine what is not the self, to familiarize the strange and mystify the familiar, is the test of their power." The act of writing is an act of power, the key on the kite string calling down the lightning. It is a lever long enough, a fulcrum strong enough, that we might yet move the world with it. It is a power that can transform us.
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Dante Luiz (@dntlz) is an Ignyte-winning horror writer and Hugo-finalist artist from Brazil. His writing has been published before by Nightmare, Future SF Digest and Interzone, among others. Find his work on danteluiz.com.
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