SLAP HAPPY LARRY

  • Short Story Study
  • Picturebooks
  • Privacy
  • The Tricksters by Margaret Mahy Young Adult Novel Study

    The Tricksters by Margaret Mahy Young Adult Novel Study

    The Tricksters is a young adult novel by New Zealand author Margaret Mahy, first published in 1986. Mahy wrote many stories for children, but The Tricksters seems to be one frequently talked about in scholarship circles, alongside The Changeover and The Haunting, which both won The Carnegie Medal. The Tricksters is a rare example of…

    Continue reading

    January 21, 2021
  • Deck the Halls by Shirley Jackson Short Story Analysis

    “Deck the Halls” is a Christmas short story by American author Shirley Jackson which asks readers to challenge what it means to be charitable. Find it in the collection Just An Ordinary Day.

    Continue reading

    December 24, 2020
  • Creepy Donkey Skin Fairy Tales Analysis

    Creepy Donkey Skin Fairy Tales Analysis

    “Donkey Skin” is an old tale which appealed to Charlies Perrault. Perrault included his own version (called “Peau-d’ Ane, Conte”) in Old-time Stories told by Master Charles Perrault (1921), ensuring the tale’s enduring popularity, and cementing Perrault’s particular spin on it in popular imagination.

    Continue reading

    December 18, 2020
  • Making Use Of Cognitive Biases In Storytelling

    Cognitive biases are at play when an audience interprets any work of art. Storytellers can make use of them, and regularly do.

    Continue reading

    December 17, 2020
  • Foes by Lorrie Moore Short Story Analysis

    “Foes” is a short story by American writer Lorrie Moore. The Guardian published it on the eve of the election which would see Obama to the presidency, and can be read in full here. It is also in Bark and in Collected Stories. This is such an American story, so Americans will have a more

    Continue reading

    December 11, 2020
  • Which novels are Australian high school English students studying?

    This list is collected from online chats about children’s books studied in Australian high schools. Comments are from teachers who have used these books in class in 2020. Australian states and territories set quotas for the minimum amount of Australian content. In Victoria, for example, it’s a third. The Hate U Give by Angie Thomas

    Continue reading

    December 1, 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.

    Continue reading

    November 20, 2020
  • In A Dark, Dark Room And Other Scary Stories

    In A Dark, Dark Room And Other Scary Stories

    In A Dark, Dark Room and Other Scary Stories written by Alvin Schwartz was first published in 1971 for emergent readers ready for scary… but not too scary. I recently looked closely at a modern picture book called Creepy Carrots, another excellent example of a ‘scary’ story perfectly pitched at 4-6 year olds. This collection

    Continue reading

    October 24, 2020
  • Creating A Fairytale World

    To a modern audience, what makes a setting feel ‘fairytale’? What is it about the tone, style and plot? I argue here that what makes a fairytale setting feel ‘fairytale’ is mostly the ‘fairytale logic’. Just as we know, almost intuitively, that a particular narrative is a fairy tale when we read it, it seems

    Continue reading

    October 4, 2020
  • Childhood Horror: Why are kid things so scary?

    Childhood Horror: Why are kid things so scary?

    Here’s the thing about horror: It can so easily turn into accidental comedy. Watch the original 1960s Twilight Zone series and what was once genuinely scary now offers a family-night laugh. An inverse is also true: What we once considered fun, innocent, cosy and child-friendly will morph over time into something sinister. In the second

    Continue reading

    October 4, 2020
  • Tight Times by Shook Hazen and Schart Hyman Analysis

    Tight Times by Shook Hazen and Schart Hyman Analysis

    Tight Times (1979) is an American picture book written by Barbara Shook Hazen and illustrated in graphite pencil by Trina Schart Hyman. Tight Times also happens to be the first ever picture book read by LeVar Burton on America’s Reading Rainbow series back in 1983. I can see why they chose it. This short picture

    Continue reading

    September 25, 2020
  • Ty’s One-Man Band by Pitts Walter and Tomes Analysis

    Ty’s One-Man Band by Pitts Walter and Tomes Analysis

    Ty’s One-Man Band (1980) is a picture book written by Mildred Pitts Walter and illustrated by Margot Tomes. This is a good mentor text if you’re writing a picture book with plenty of rhythmic onomatopoeia. If reading to modern kids, they might find this slow, quiet picture book a bit more exciting if encouraged to

    Continue reading

    September 21, 2020
  • Little House On The Prairie Analysis

    Little House On The Prairie Analysis

    Should parents expose our modern kids to Little House On The Prairie, given the uncomfortable realities?

    Continue reading

    August 18, 2020
  • Old Mother Frost Fairy Tale Analysis

    Old Mother Frost Fairy Tale Analysis

    Old Mother Frost” is a German fairy tale also known as “Mother Holle”, “Mother Hulda” and “Frau Holle”.

    Continue reading

    August 7, 2020
  • Rich As Stink by Alice Munro Short Story Analysis

    Rich As Stink by Alice Munro Short Story Analysis

    Rich as Stink is a short story by Canadian writer Alice Munro included in the 1998 collection The Love Of A Good Woman. Gaslighting, parentification, spousification, self-objectification, coercive control… People living in 1974 did not have ready access to the language of psychology and found it difficult to describe emotionally abusive relationships, let alone talk

    Continue reading

    July 30, 2020
←Previous Page
1 … 4 5 6 7 8 … 13
Next Page→

SLAP HAPPY LARRY

Proudly powered by WordPress