Author: Lynley

  • Things To Know About Miyazaki Films

    Things To Know About Miyazaki Films

    1. MIYAZAKI’S FILMS FEATURE A TECHNIQUE CALLED ‘PILLOW SHOTS’ A “pillow shot” is a cutaway, for no obvious narrative reason, to a visual element, often a landscape or an empty room, that is held for a significant time (five or six seconds). It can be at the start of a scene or during a scene. Dangerous Minds It comes from the famous…

    Continue reading

  • The River Between Us by Richard Peck

    The River Between Us by Richard Peck

    The River Between Us is a middle grade novel by American writer Richard Peck.

    Continue reading

  • The Ideology Of Fatness In Children’s Stories

    Fat studies scholars and activists have traced and challenged the longstanding association between fatness and ugliness. While fat bodies were once revered because they signified wealth and prosperity, the proliferation of advertising and consumer culture has, over the past four decades, turned a fat body into an ugly body. Such scholarship makes clear that the association of fatness with ugliness…

    Continue reading

  • Brokeback Mountain by Annie Proulx Short Story Analysis

    Brokeback Mountain by Annie Proulx Short Story Analysis

    “Brokeback Mountain” is a heart-wrenching short story in part because of its density and one-sitting experience. This is an amazing feat. I mean, it’s so short, right? Normally you need the build-up of an entire novel to induce such strong reactions in readers. Or at least the soundtrack, cinematography and expert acting of a film. Annie Proulx’s short stories have the…

    Continue reading

  • Fabulism In Children’s Literature

    FABULISM: WHAT IS IT? In fabulism, fantastical elements are placed in an everyday setting. It’s called ‘fabulism’ because authors are playing with realism by making use of elements of fable. For the definition of a fable, see here. COMMON FEATURES OF FABULIST FICTION The Bloody Chamber and Other Stories by Angela Carter is a collection of fabulist stories. COMMON FEATURES…

    Continue reading

  • 55 Miles To The Gas Pump by Annie Proulx Short Story Analysis

    “55 Miles To The Gas Pump” by Annie Proulx is a concise retelling of “Bluebeard” in a remote, rural American setting.

    Continue reading

  • Annie Proulx’s The Governors Of Wyoming Short Story Analysis

    Annie Proulx’s The Governors Of Wyoming Short Story Analysis

    “The Governors Of Wyoming” by Annie Proulx is a short novella — one of her concise sagas — divided into parts. WADE WALLS Our characters are introduced, as well as the dynamics between them. From the title we know to pay close attention to Wade Walls. Renti — chews fruity gum, a small grubby woman in black tights and construction…

    Continue reading

  • Secrets, Liars and Lies In Storytelling

    Secrets, Liars and Lies In Storytelling

    Liars are everywhere in stories. Stories themselves can be considered giant lies (which tell a deeper truth). The trope of the mask is a part of all this. Certain genres demand a ‘mask’, or, lying. That’s because entire genres are about finding out the truth: The cinema cannot show the truth, or reveal it, because the truth is not out…

    Continue reading

  • Pirates in Art and Storytelling

    Pirates in Art and Storytelling

    It is absolutely bizarre that we romanticise criminals the way we romanticise pirates but there we have it.

    Continue reading

  • Strays Like Us by Richard Peck Storytelling Tips

    Strays Like Us is a 1998 middle grade novel by American author Richard Peck. (155 pages) Peck not only understands the fragile emotions of adolescents, he also knows what kind of characters will pique their interest. In this tender novel, he paints a richly detailed portrait of Molly, a drug-addict’s daughter sent at the age of 12 to live with…

    Continue reading

  • A Lonely Coast by Annie Proulx Short Story Analysis

    A Lonely Coast by Annie Proulx Short Story Analysis

    The first thing that feels different about “A Lonely Coast” in the Close Range collection by Annie Proulx is the voice. This short story begins in second person point of view, then switches to first in the second paragraph. The previous stories of this collection were all written by a third-person unseen narrator with an intimate knowledge of the milieu…

    Continue reading

  • The Magical Age of Twelve

    Being alone is a newness to a twelve-year-old child. He is so used to people about. The only way he can be alone is in his mind. There are so many real people around, telling children what and how to do, that a boy has to run off down a beach, even if it’s only in his head, to get…

    Continue reading

  • Storytelling Tips From ‘Anne With An E’

    Storytelling Tips From ‘Anne With An E’

    I’m a big fan of Anne Of Green Gables, the 1980s TV miniseries and also of Breaking Bad, so I anticipated Moira Walley-Beckett’s 2017 re-visioning of Anne Of Green Gables with great enthusiasm. I’m not disappointed. ‘Anne With An E’ is great. (It seems I’m not in good company by saying that.) There’s much to learn from Moira Walley-Beckett. How did she manage…

    Continue reading

  • Annie Proulx’s “Pair A Spurs” Analysis

    “Pair a Spurs” is a short story by American author Annie Proulx, published in the collection Brokeback Mountain and Other Stories. SETTING “Pair A Spurs” by Annie Proulx is set on a couple of Wyoming Ranches in the late 1990s SURROUNDING CULTURE Rather than open with landscape, sky-scape and weather, this time Annie Proulx opens with a political era. I…

    Continue reading

  • Proulx’s Bunchgrass Edge Of The World Short Story Analysis

    This modern retelling of The Frog Prince by Annie Proulx was published in the November edition of The New Yorker in 1998 and included in her Close Range collection of short stories. Many of [Proulx’s] stories are explicitly anchored in the history of the United States, and abound with references to background historical events and to real places. To give but one…

    Continue reading