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  • How to become invisible

    How to become invisible

    March 17, 2020

    For this one you must go to Iceland. Once in Iceland, get your hands on a magical text full of spells and suchlike, a.k.a. Icelandic grimoires. But to save you the trouble, refer to the recipe below.

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  • Rufus and the Blackberry Monster by Lisa Stubbs Analysis

    Rufus and the Blackberry Monster by Lisa Stubbs Analysis

    March 16, 2020

    1999 in picture books was the year of monsters in the forest. Jez Alborough was finishing up his bear series about a massive toy bear, actually harmless. Julia Donaldson and Axel Scheffler released their phenomenal hit The Gruffalo. Rufus and the Blackberry Monster by Lisa Stubbs is part of the same family. Comparisons between this…

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  • Fairy Cup Legends In Modern Children’s Stories

    Fairy Cup Legends In Modern Children’s Stories

    March 14, 2020

    Is fairy land real? Some children’s stories would like us to think so. Their endings contain a ‘wink’, encouraging readers to carry the possibility of fantasy lands with them, even after the story draws to a close. This is one way of achieving resonance. We might argue this is a cheap trick. Enter Richard Dawkins,…

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  • There’s A Crocodile Under My Bed! by Ingrid and Dieter Schubert Analysis

    There’s A Crocodile Under My Bed! by Ingrid and Dieter Schubert Analysis

    March 11, 2020

    There’s A Crocodile Under My Bed! is a picture book written and illustrated by Ingrid and Dieter Schubert. First published in 1980, that makes this classic forty years old. There are a large number of picture books about creatures lurking under beds, and many similar titles out there. The most widely known is Mercer Meyer’s…

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  • Monster Pet! by McAllister and Middleton Analysis

    Monster Pet! by McAllister and Middleton Analysis

    March 10, 2020

    Monster Pet! is a 2005 picture book written by Angela McAllister and illustrated by Charlotte Middleton. The story is designed to get young readers thinking about the responsibility of caring for a sentient creature. A body swap plot is used to that end, though I suspect more empathy derives from the facial expressions on the…

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  • The Symbolism of Hats and Crowns

    The Symbolism of Hats and Crowns

    March 7, 2020

    Hats can turn you into a human. Hats also indicate your social status and show deference.

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  • Aeon Timeline 2 Review

    Aeon Timeline 2 Review

    March 5, 2020

    Aeon Timeline 2 is a well-oiled piece of software with various uses. Writers might use it in two distinct ways.

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  • A Blaze by Katherine Mansfield Short Story Analysis

    A Blaze by Katherine Mansfield Short Story Analysis

    March 2, 2020

    “A Blaze” (1911) is a short story by Katherine Mansfield, included in her German Pension collection. This is a story about a dynamic known in Japan as amae.

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  • A Brief History of Road Trip Stories

    A Brief History of Road Trip Stories

    March 1, 2020

    Road trip stories are basically mythic journeys. Usually, a group of friends or family are travelling together instead of alone. As well as meeting a succession of opponents along the way they argue among themselves. The Minotaur opponent who comes in from outside either binds them together or (in a tragedy) drives them apart. Occasionally…

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  • Symbolism of The Child

    Symbolism of The Child

    February 28, 2020

    Critics who treat adult as a term of approval, instead of merely a descriptive term, cannot be adult themselves. To be concerned about being grown up, to admire the grown up because it is grown up, to blush at the suspicion of being childish; these are the marks of childhood and adolescence […] The modern…

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  • Unicorns in Art, Storytelling and Marketing

    February 27, 2020

    If you’ve visited the girls’ section of a chain store recently you’ll have noticed that unicorns are in this season. These 2020 unicorns are a particular type of unicorn — coloured in soft pastel colours and with their eyes closed. It’s not just unicorns with their eyes closed this year — all the cute animals…

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  • Doctor Jack-o’-Lantern by Richard Yates Analysis

    Doctor Jack-o’-Lantern by Richard Yates Analysis

    February 26, 2020

    “Doctor Jack-o’-Lantern” is a short story by Richard Yates, the first in his 1962 collection Eleven Kinds of Loneliness. The story of the new kid in school is very popular in children’s literature, which is of course written for children. But what might a New Kid In School story for adults look like? This is…

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  • Disorientation And Spatial Horror In Fiction

    Disorientation And Spatial Horror In Fiction

    February 25, 2020

    I’ve been thinking about ways in which a storyteller creates a sense of unease for the audience, but spatially. We might call this spatial horror. I’m talking about disorientation, dizziness, light-headedness, fear of falling, and various senses outlined in the graphic below.

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  • Tunnel and Cave Symbolism

    Tunnel and Cave Symbolism

    February 24, 2020

    In symbolism, there is often a manmade and naturally occurring equivalent. The tunnel is the manmade version of a cave, the sewer a sea (littoral) cave.

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  • Poison by Katherine Mansfield Short Story Analysis

    Poison by Katherine Mansfield Short Story Analysis

    February 23, 2020

    Poison” (1920) is a short story by Katherine Mansfield, the last in the Something Childish and Other Stories collection, published by Middleton Murry four years later, after her death. Commentators have noticed veiled references to “My Last Duchess”, a poem by Robert Browning about a murderous duke.

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