Endless Myth and Promethea
— Magic, Storytelling, and Imagination as Cosmic Structure —
The novel Endless Myth and Promethea share a remarkably deep connection.
Both works treat imagination and storytelling themselves as structures capable of shaping reality.
Neither work is merely science fiction or fantasy.
Instead, they combine mythology, philosophy, religion, cosmology, and metafiction to continuously question the nature of existence itself.
In both stories, fiction gradually begins invading reality.
1. What Is Promethea?
Promethea was created by Alan Moore and J. H. Williams III.
Although published as a comic series, it evolves far beyond the traditional superhero format.
Over time, the narrative dives deeply into:
Magic
Kabbalah
Mysticism
Imagination
Collective consciousness
The story becomes both philosophical exploration and metaphysical experience.
2. A World Where Imagination Becomes Real
One of the defining concepts of Promethea is that imagined beings possess real existence.
Promethea is not merely a fictional character.
She is an idea and mythological entity that manifests through different individuals across history.
In this sense, fiction itself becomes alive.
3. Shared Themes with Endless Myth: Mythology as Reality
In Endless Myth, mythological systems and observational records are not simply background lore.
Structures such as:
Gods
Devils
Omniverses
The Uncertain Infinite Domain
exist as active cosmological systems.
Similarly, Promethea treats mythology and imagination as literal components of reality itself.
4. Magic and Narrative Structure
Alan Moore is widely known for his personal interest in occult philosophy and ritual magic.
As a result, magic in Promethea is not portrayed as simple fantasy spectacle.
Instead, it becomes:
a method for transforming human perception of reality.
This resembles Endless Myth, where observation and higher-dimensional structures actively alter existence itself.
5. Expanding the Limits of Comics
Promethea also pushes the comic medium beyond conventional storytelling.
Its page layouts, colors, symbols, and typography are designed not only to tell a story, but to create a psychological and visual experience.
Especially in later chapters, the work begins to resemble philosophical literature or visionary hallucination more than standard comics.
6. Fiction as Cosmology
In Promethea, imagination itself connects directly to the structure of the cosmos.
The chain becomes:
Story
→ Myth
→ Collective consciousness
→ Cosmic structure
This strongly resembles the omniversal cosmology of Endless Myth.
7. Fiction Invading Reality
In Promethea, the boundary between fiction and reality gradually collapses.
Stories are no longer passive entertainment.
They become forces capable of altering human perception and existence itself.
Endless Myth similarly connects observation and reality as inseparable systems.
Both works therefore share the idea that:
stories possess the power to rewrite worlds.
Conclusion: Imagination Becomes the Universe Itself
Endless Myth and Promethea both explore cosmologies built from imagination and mythology:
Endless Myth: infinite omniversal mythology
Promethea: magical and imaginative cosmology
What Promethea ultimately suggests is that fiction is not merely entertainment.
It is a massive psychological and spiritual structure through which humanity attempts to understand reality itself.
This comparison leads to a larger question:
What is a story truly?
A fantasy created by the mind—
or a higher-dimensional language humanity uses to perceive the universe itself?






