George MacDonald (1824-1905) created the fantasy works, At the Back of the North Wind and the Princess books which contain the following two worlds: the fantasy world and the real world at the same time. In these fantasy works, child protagonists come and go between the two worlds. This kind of journey gives them insights into the real world or answers to their questions. In At the Back of the North Wind, North Wind is a mystical lady who visits Diamond, the child protagonist and helps him make a journey into the fantasy land. In The Princess and Goblin, Princess Irene’s secret stairway leads her to her great-great-grandmother’s fantasy world in the tower of the palace. Also, in The Princess and Curdie, Curdie, who works in a mine, meets the same great-great-mother in his awakened imagination. These visions enable the child protagonists to get answers to the problems of their reality and unify the two worlds of fantasy and reality. In these fantasy works, these thoughts are expressed in the fairy tale tradition through fairy tale motifs and characters. MacDonald does not, however, use ‘happily ever after’ fairy tale conclusion to solve the problems. For instance, in At the Back of the North Wind, Diamond, who brought some changes into his real world, dies. In The Princess and Curdie, the new world Gwyntystorm falls at the end of the novel. For MacDonald ‘the death’ or ‘the end’ is a positive conclusion as it signifies a sign of renewal or a new beginning. MacDonald hopes that imaginative readers will change the reality into an ideal community, just as the child protagonists solved the problems of their communities in order to head for an ideal community.