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The World as Myth

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Robert A. Heinlein's The Number of the Beast introduces the concept of the "World as Myth" which supposes that all fictional universes are equally real and, moreover, are accessible to one another via interdimensional travel. The act of authorship is what creates said universes, which leads to the interesting notion that the characters in any given universe may be controlled, at any given moment, by an Author from another. Characters could, in theory, meet their own Author. Conversely, each Author is a character in someone else's fiction.

The Number of the Beast and its two sequels make extensive use of the concept to permit a Massive Multiplayer Crossover between all the fictional universes that Heinlein wrote and those of several other authors of his era.

Compare and contrast the Fiction Identity Postulate, which instead posits that all fiction is equally unreal to similar effect.

Tropes embodied or directly implied by the World as Myth:

Alternative Title(s): All Stories Are Real Somewhere

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