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  • Burglar Bill by Janet and Allan Ahlberg Analysis

    Burglar Bill by Janet and Allan Ahlberg Analysis

    Burglar Bill is a picture book by Janet and Allan Ahlberg, first published in 1977. There are a number of picture books about burglars who break into houses at night, one of a child’s greatest fears going to sleep. Burglars can be found all across children’s literature. (Enid Blyton loved burglars.)

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    November 9, 2020
  • Avocado Baby by John Burningham (1982) Analysis

    Avocado Baby by John Burningham (1982) Analysis

    Avocado Baby (1982) is a picture book written and illustrated by John Burningham. This was my first introduction to John Burningham. Our teacher read it in class. I was about six.

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    October 20, 2020
  • My Mother’s Dream by Alice Munro Short Story Analysis

    My Mother’s Dream by Alice Munro Short Story Analysis

    **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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    August 26, 2020
  • Parties in Art and Fiction

    Parties in Art and Fiction

    Parties provide an excellent setting for getting people together. And when people are together this creates conflict, the backbone of any story. Like other high-stress, socially critical events such as competitions and staged performances, parties also often happen at the climax of a story. Events leading up to the party garner suspense due to the…

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    July 20, 2020
  • Pettson and Findus Pancake Pie by Sven Nordqvist

    Pancake Pie (1984) is a Swedish picture book written and illustrated by Sven Nordqvist, and is the first in the Pettson and Findus series starring a man and his cat who live together on a rustic farm, along with many little creatures who make the setting seem alive.

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    July 7, 2020
  • The Storybook Police Archetype

    The Storybook Police Archetype

    Australia has a uniquely trusting relationship with its police force. We might say the image of police here in Australia is based on a storybook image, one which is cultivated in white kids from the time we start reading children’s books. The only feelings mankind has inspired in policemen are indifference and scorn. UN FLIC…

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    July 4, 2020
  • Depicting Motion In Illustration

    Depicting Motion In Illustration

    How do illustrators convey motion when creating static images?

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    June 25, 2020
  • Higglety Piggelty Pop! or There Must Be More To Life Analysis

    Higglety Piggelty Pop! or There Must Be More To Life Analysis

    Higglety Pigglety Pop! or There Must Be More To Life is an illustrated short story, though some might just call it a picture book. The language is too sophisticated to count as an early reader, unlike the Mercy Watson series, of a similar length and also divided into chapters. Why divide such a short story…

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    May 29, 2020
  • The Symbolic Basement In Fiction

    The Symbolic Basement In Fiction

    In Gaston Bachelard’s Symbolic Dream House, you probably shouldn’t go down to the basement, ever. I mean it. Nothing good ever happens down there. The basement is the house version of a fairytale forest — a descent into the subconscious. We can’t control our subconscious. That’s what makes it scary. EXAMPLE ONE: BASEMENTS AND BEREAVEMENT…

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    November 5, 2019
  • Zoomorphism and Chremamorphism

    Zoomorphism and Chremamorphism

    Both personification and anthropomorphism are types of metaphors. But what do you call it when it’s the other way round? i.e., when a human being is compared to an animal by virtue of animal characteristics?

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    September 19, 2019
  • Talking About Story Pacing

    Talking About Story Pacing

    Narratologists have come up with a variety of ways of talking about the pacing of a story.

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    May 5, 2019
  • Humour In Children’s Stories

    Founding editor of The Onion wants to help with the job of learning the write comedy. Stephen Johnson argues that every joke falls into one of 11 categories. At first glance this sounds like the ‘Seven Basic Plots’ idea, which is a pretty unhelpful way of looking at story if you’re harbouring hopes of telling…

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    July 9, 2017
  • Wolf Hollow by Lauren Wolk Novel Study

    Wolf Hollow by Lauren Wolk Novel Study

    Wolf Hollow (2016) is a middle grade novel by Lauren Wolk. This mid-20th century story is chock-full of symbolism which makes it great for a novel study. Here I focus instead on the writing techniques, for writers of middle grade. Though moons tend to be massive in children’s books, the moon on this cover would…

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    February 5, 2017
  • The Rule Of Three In Storytelling

    The Rule Of Three In Storytelling

    The rule of three in storytelling has several uses. The first works like this:

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    November 20, 2016
  • The Mechanical Behaviour Of Fussbudgets In Comedy

    The Mechanical Behaviour Of Fussbudgets In Comedy

    Fussbudgets, sticklers, officious types, whatever you want to call them — comedy gold. An essential component of the fussbudget is mechanical behaviour.  We’ve all had run-ins with them, which makes the comedy aspect universal. MECHANICAL BEHAVIOUR ON SCREEN This gag plays out especially well visually, so you’ll see it in many films and TV shows.…

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    May 21, 2016
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