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  • You’re Ugly, Too by Lorrie Moore Short Story Analysis

    You’re Ugly, Too by Lorrie Moore Short Story Analysis

    “You’re Ugly, Too” is a short story by American writer Lorrie Moore, first published in a 1989 edition of The New Yorker — Moore’s first for the New Yorker. Find it also in her short story collection Like Life (1990).

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    November 30, 2020
  • Bravado by William Trevor Short Story Analysis

    Bravado by William Trevor Short Story Analysis

    If you think you’re too old to write about contemporary young characters, take your cue from Irish short story master William Trevor, who wrote “Bravado”, about young people and night-clubbing culture, at almost 80 years of age.

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    November 20, 2020
  • How To Make Friends With A Ghost by Rebecca Green Picture Book Analysis

    How To Make Friends With A Ghost by Rebecca Green Picture Book Analysis

    How To Make Friends With A Ghost is a 2017 picture book written and illustrated by Rebecca Green. This cosy supernatural story is written as a non-fictional how-to guide and because this book deals with supernatural subject matter, covertly teaches how to be a good friend.

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    October 16, 2020
  • Frog Goes to Dinner by Mercer Mayer 1974 Analysis

    Frog Goes to Dinner by Mercer Mayer 1974 Analysis

    Frog Goes To Dinner (1974) is a wordless carnivalesque picture book by American author/illustrator Mercer Mayer, and the fifth in a series about a boy and his beloved frog. Wordless picture books are perhaps the most emotionally affecting, because they work with us at a deeper level. Frog Goes To Dinner works on an emotional…

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    October 12, 2020
  • Wolf in the Snow by Matthew Cordell Analysis

    Wolf in the Snow by Matthew Cordell Analysis

    Wolf in the Snow (2017) is an almost wordless picture book written and illustrated by Matthew Cordell, with links to the Little Red Riding Hood fairy tale. All picturebooks are puzzles. The details of pictures invite attention to their implications. The unmoving pictures require viewers to solve the puzzle of what actions and motions they…

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    September 20, 2020
  • The Hare and the Tortoise

    The Hare and the Tortoise

    You win some, you lose some. Aesop was an equal opportunity storyteller and the tortoise of fables sometimes gets a raw deal. But not this particular tortoise. Sometimes it’s “The Hare and the Tortoise”, sometimes it’s “The Tortoise and the Hare”. This tortoise just goes about his business and wins the day. I’ve never once…

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    August 22, 2020
  • Mercy Watson To The Rescue by DiCamillo and Van Dusen

    Mercy Watson To The Rescue by DiCamillo and Van Dusen

    Mercy Watson To The Rescue (2005) is a picture book divided into chapters for the emergent reader, written by Kate DiCamillo, illustrated by Chris Van Dusen.

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    August 15, 2020
  • Charlotte’s Web Novel Study Analysis

    Charlotte’s Web Novel Study Analysis

    At almost 32,000 words, Charlotte’s Web (1952, 1963) is a middle grade novel rather than a chapter book. This is a story with many  hidden depths, which appeals to middle grade kids as well as their adult co-readers. Below I’ll be getting into how this story appeals to both children and adults, the themes of…

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    May 29, 2020
  • Emotion In Storytelling: Kindness and Pathos

    Emotion In Storytelling: Kindness and Pathos

    How does a storyteller create pathos in an audience? It’s not done by making a character sad. Nor is it done by simply killing a character off. Characters extending kindness to others is a far more reliable trick.

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    May 12, 2020
  • Loneliness in Art and Storytelling

    Loneliness in Art and Storytelling

    Edward Hopper was a master at depicting loneliness with paint. The sense of isolation is achieved with colour and composition. Eyes don’t meet, or not at the same time. Body language is closed off. Figures are small inside vast spaces, their heads far from the top of the canvas. They gaze from windows as if…

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    April 17, 2020
  • The Little Governess by Katherine Mansfield Short Story Analysis

    The Little Governess by Katherine Mansfield Short Story Analysis

    Katherine Mansfield wrote. It’s a cautionary tale without the Perrault didacticism. It’s Little Red Riding Hood, but social realism. This story exists to say, “You’re not alone.” It’s a gendered story, about the specifically femme experience of being alone in public space. Some critics find the ending inadequate. This is a stellar example of a…

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    April 8, 2020
  • 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

    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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    March 11, 2020
  • A Brief History of Road Trip Stories

    A Brief History of Road Trip Stories

    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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    March 1, 2020
  • Psychology by Katherine Mansfield Short Story Analysis

    Psychology by Katherine Mansfield Short Story Analysis

    “Psychology” (1919) is a short story by Katherine Mansfield, redolent with sexual tension which unexpectedly morphs into something else at the end. As expected from the title, the bulk of the story comprises a character’s interiority. After first setting the mood, Mansfield gets right into a woman’s feelings. Yet do we feel we know her?…

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    December 29, 2019
  • How To Write Like Alice Munro

    How To Write Like Alice Munro

    **UPDATE LATE 2024** After Alice Munro died, we learned about the real ‘open secrets’ (not so open to those of us not in the loop) which dominated the author’s life. We must now find a way to live with the reality that Munro’s work reads very differently after knowing certain decisions she made when faced…

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    November 30, 2019
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