Kokoro Daisuke wrote:Most writers I know are just a little bit whacky in the head.
Hey. I resemble that remark.
Actually, I don't know about multiple personality disorder, but writers in general do tend to have a rather high suicide rate.
ShiroiHikari wrote:some people just have a desire to create.
I would agree, and go one step further to say that our desire to create is one of the ways in which man most clearly displays God's image. After all, the first thing we learn about God in the Bible is that he created. In response to the original question, you could just as easily ask, "Is life so devoid of natural beauty that we must paint our own beautiful pictures?" I believe that although the creative urge can be, and often is, misused, it can also be both an act of worship and a way of imitating God.
At a very basic level, stories can sometimes serve an instructional purpose (Aesop's fables, for example). Beyond this didactic function, however, stories also have value in giving us a new perspective on ideas and experiences that we are familiar with. Also, they tend to distill common human experiences into a form that has coherence and meaning. Humans have a tendency to organize events into a conceptual framework of some sort--like remembering the events of a day that are important and forgetting those that are not. It's almost a psychological necessity; if we did not do this, our lives would seem like an accumulation of random events without any meaning. Stories do the same thing, but in a much more systematic way.