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  • The Cosy House and Barn

    The Cosy House and Barn

    Home is important to all of us and perhaps even more important to young readers. This is why the mythic journey when it occurs in children’s literature is more commonly known as the home-away-home story — unless a child moves house at the beginning of the story they most often explore alone for a while…

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    June 1, 2016
  • Mercy Watson Goes For A Ride by diCamillo and Van Dusen

    Mercy Watson Goes For A Ride by diCamillo and Van Dusen

    If you’re looking for a chapter book to bridge the gap between beautifully illustrated picturebooks and pictureless novels, the Mercy Watson series is a great option, because the illustrations are just as enticing as any found in a high-production picture book.

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    May 31, 2016
  • The Rats In The Walls by H.P. Lovecraft Analysis

    The Rats In The Walls by H.P. Lovecraft Analysis

    If you’re a fan of Renovation Rescue or Extreme Makeover: Home Edition and think you’ve seen some good horror stories, you might consider turning brief attention to the story of H.P. Lovecraft, and I don’t actually mean his tragic life story in which he only achieved fame after an early, lonely death; I’m talking about…

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    May 30, 2016
  • The Role Of The Chimera In Storytelling

    The Role Of The Chimera In Storytelling

    Before modern science took hold, when humans were still trying to classify everything we saw around us, people really did believe in the chimera. Take the example of the Scoter duck. No one could decide whether this bird was a bird or a fish. he Abbe of Vallemont even took it out of the bird…

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    May 29, 2016
  • The Wolves In The Walls by Neil Gaiman and Dave McKean Analysis

    The Wolves In The Walls by Neil Gaiman and Dave McKean Analysis

    **UPDATE LATE 2024** Neil Gaiman is an abuser. If this is news to you and you’re skeptical, here is a link roundup. Tortoise was the first (semi) mainstream outlet to give voice to one of Gaiman’s victims. Unfortunately, Tortoise is funded and owned by a notorious anti-trans bigot, so even though I listened to the…

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    May 28, 2016
  • Lesson Plan: Write Your Own Urban Legend

    Lesson Plan: Write Your Own Urban Legend

    AIM: Students will create an original story as an homage to a classic urban legend.

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    May 27, 2016
  • The Dark by Lemony Snicket and Jon Klassen Analysis

    The Dark by Lemony Snicket and Jon Klassen Analysis

    The Dark is a picture book written by Daniel Handler, illustrated by Jon Klassen. A boy faces his fear of the dark in an archetypal dream house. WHAT HAPPENS IN THE DARK? Shortcoming/Need Psychological Shortcoming: “Laszlo was afraid of the dark.” In children’s books, characters don’t need a moral shortcoming. (In other words, a child character…

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    May 26, 2016
  • Some Things Are Scary by Florence Parry Heide and Robert Osborn Analysis

    Some Things Are Scary by Florence Parry Heide and Robert Osborn Analysis

    Some Things Are Scary is a favourite from my own childhood, and now that my daughter loves it just as much, I appreciate its timelessness. This book would make an excellent mentor text for a classroom of young writers. They might use the structure to create their own story about scary things. I only have the…

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    May 25, 2016
  • Symbolism Of The Dream House, Cottage, Bungalow and Cabin

    Symbolism Of The Dream House, Cottage, Bungalow and Cabin

    House symbolism is an interesting way of looking at a story. Have you noticed that houses as depicted in Western picture books tend to look the same? Two storied, bedrooms upstairs, slightly untidy but still Pinterest-worthy? There’s a reason for this. Each part of a house is symbolically unique. Gaston Bachelard talks about this in…

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    May 24, 2016
  • Blackdog by Levi Pinfold Analysis

    Blackdog by Levi Pinfold Analysis

    Anyone who has ever seen a huge unfriendly dog standing right outside their glass door will know how frightening it can be. Pinfold takes that fear and now we have Blackdog.

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    May 23, 2016
  • Why is the horror genre so popular?

    Why is the horror genre so popular?

    We like to be scared. Rather, fear sends a rush of adrenaline, and we like that. Scratch that. Maybe it’s the relief we feel once the rush of adrenaline is over. For the same reason, social media can be addictive. That rush when we hear a reply coming back from a tweet? That rush is…

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    May 22, 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
  • Dollhouse Symbolism In Storytelling

    Dollhouse Symbolism In Storytelling

    Dollhouses in stories fall into a number of main categories: Through the window, the benches are snowcapped, stippled with pigeon prints. Winter came early to New York. The apartments across the way glow shades of yellow. Figures move from room to room. They look like doll-people. I want to collect their love seats and kitchen…

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    May 17, 2016
  • The Beach As Setting In Storytelling

    The Beach As Setting In Storytelling

    Across all forms of storytelling the beach functions as an  alternative, liberating space, almost a heterotopia. The beach is also a liminal space, partly because it forms the boundary between land and sea. The beach as a tourist destination is also a liminal space because visitors can “enjoy experiences and feelings that are often repressed…

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    May 15, 2016
  • The Mouse and His Child by Russell Hoban

    The Mouse and His Child by Russell Hoban

    This middle grade novel features talking animals, especially mice, toys and doll’s houses. The Mouse and His Child is no Velveteen Rabbit, however. As Margaret Blount says, The Mouse and His Child defies classification, and is therefore of interest to critics and children’s literature enthusiasts: Russell Hoban’s The Mouse and His Child (1969) is such a strange,…

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    May 14, 2016
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