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  • There’s A Sea In My Bedroom by Margaret Wild Analysis

    There’s A Sea In My Bedroom by Margaret Wild Analysis

    November 24, 2018

    There’s A Sea In My Bedroom (1984) is a classic Australian picture book, written by Margaret Wild and illustrated in realistic fantasy style by Jane Tanner.

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  • Dinner Time In Art and Storytelling

    November 23, 2018

    What does dinner time look like in your house? Do you see your own family tradition reflected in children’s books? I remember hearing once — perhaps on the yak track of Downton Abbey — that, for film makers, table scenes are the most difficult to shoot and edit. Unlike in any other scene, the characters…

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  • Theodore Mouse Goes To Sea by Michaela Muntean Analysis

    Theodore Mouse Goes To Sea by Michaela Muntean Analysis

    November 22, 2018

    Theodore Mouse Goes To Sea is a Little Golden Book first published 1983. The illustrations are by Lucinda McQueen. There is a series of stories about Theodore the Mouse.

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  • President Squid by Aaron Reynolds and Sara Varon Analysis

    President Squid by Aaron Reynolds and Sara Varon Analysis

    November 21, 2018

    The most hilarious thing about President Squid is that it is not about President Trump. Well, of course it’s about Trump and all of his kind, but as the author told Betsy Bird in an interview,  it was already written and in the publishing pipeline before Trump even began his campaign. Reynolds wrote it around…

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  • Negatives by Annie Proulx Short Story Analysis

    Negatives by Annie Proulx Short Story Analysis

    November 20, 2018

    “Negatives” is a short story by Annie Proulx, first published 1994 in Esquire, later included in the Heart Songs collection. You can read it online, with limited unpaid access. “Negatives” is the most brutal of the stories in this collection. Content note for rape. Reasons to read this story: THE DEEP AUTUMN CAME QUICKLY. Abandoned…

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  • The Sailor Dog by Margaret Wise Brown

    November 19, 2018

    The Sailor Dog by Margaret Wise Brown is a Little Golden Book classic, first published 1953. After the success of Mister Dog, Wise Brown and Garth Williams were paired by the publisher the following year. The Sailor Dog is basically a Robinsonnade for the preschool set. The Robinsonnade is an adventure story which takes place…

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  • Character Study: Tony Soprano

    Character Study: Tony Soprano

    November 18, 2018

    Much has been said about the character of Tony Soprano. I’ve explored some of it on this blog; Tony Soprano will always come up in discussions about antiheroes. David Chase (writer of The Sopranos) used every trick in the writer’s handbook to make the audience empathise with Tony Soprano in the pilot episode. It worked.…

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  • Onomatopoeia, Mimesis and Children’s Literature

    Onomatopoeia, Mimesis and Children’s Literature

    November 17, 2018

    Someone in a children’s writing forum crowdsourced recently: What does a waterfall sound like? They were after an onomatopoeic sound. Some replied ‘trickle’. Others said ‘trickle’ is no good at all for a waterfall, as ‘trickle’ suggests a piddling amount of water. I don’t know what they decided, but I thought of my years learning…

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  • The Tale of Squirrel Nutkin by Beatrix Potter Analysis

    The Tale of Squirrel Nutkin by Beatrix Potter Analysis

    November 16, 2018

    and illustrated by Beatrix Potter. Squirrel Nutkin is an example of a story from the First Age of Children’s Literature, though Beatrix Potter herself did much to usher in the more modern style of children’s story.

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  • The Appeal of Milly Molly Mandy

    The Appeal of Milly Molly Mandy

    November 15, 2018

    Milly Molly Mandy remains one of my mother’s favourite books, but even then it was old. Milly Molly Mandy is in fact the great-grandmother of today’s child readers. I’m not sure how popular these stories are among the contemporary audience, but I can say for sure, Milly Molly Mandy entertained at least two generations of…

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  • Stephen King’s IT Storytelling Techniques

    Stephen King’s IT Storytelling Techniques

    November 14, 2018

    IT is a 1986 horror novel by Stephen King, first adapted for screen in 1990, and most recently in 2017. This blog post is about the storytelling of the 2017 film. After filming ‘IT’ (2007) Bill Skarsgård had daily nightmares of Pennywise. In these nightmares, he would battle Pennywise just as the characters in the…

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  • Somersault Film Storytelling Techniques

    Somersault Film Storytelling Techniques

    November 13, 2018

    Last month I wrote about the film American Honey, set in America but written and directed by Andrea Arnold, who is English. If there’s an Australian equivalent of American Honey, Somersault is it. Somersault is a 2004 film written and directed by another (all-too-rare) female filmmaker, Cate Shortland. SIMILARITIES BETWEEN AMERICAN HONEY AND SOMERSAULT Both…

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  • Mister Dog by Margaret Wise Brown and Garth Williams Analysis

    Mister Dog by Margaret Wise Brown and Garth Williams Analysis

    November 12, 2018

    Mister Dog, written by Margaret Wise Brown, was first published by Little Golden Books in 1952. This was the last book published in Wise Brown’s lifetime before she died age 42. Garth Brown illustrated the text in his distinctive Garth Brown style. The story is about a dog with the stand-out gag that he ‘belongs…

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  • Scuffy The Tugboat by Gertrude Crampton Analysis

    Scuffy The Tugboat by Gertrude Crampton Analysis

    November 11, 2018

    The Little Golden Books series was launched in 1942, just as the second world war ended. Children needed to hunker down with cosy stories (along with their parents). Scuff The Tugboat was one of the earlier publications of this highly successful franchise, first printed in 1946, and the epitome of ‘cosy’. Now you can buy…

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  • Chekhov’s Toy Gun In Children’s Literature

    Chekhov’s Toy Gun In Children’s Literature

    November 10, 2018

    Chekhov’s gun is a storytelling technique to do with foreshadowing. The author places a gun in the story/picture and one of the characters uses it later. This is the general rule: If the gun has been placed, the author must make use of it. Otherwise the reader will wonder what on earth it was doing…

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