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What's Your Story?

A Young Person's Guide to Writing Fiction

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
The award-winning author “provides mentoring and practical and technical advice in this handy how-to book . . . as useful to teachers as to young writers” (School Library Journal, starred review).
 
Storytelling is a universal experience. From an early age, we begin to shape our own world by crafting tales. But learning to tell—and write—a good story isn’t easy. It takes dedication and practice, just like for a musician or an athlete, and it can be just as rewarding to accomplish as winning a game or mastering an instrument. It’s the kind of work that feeds our souls and makes us glad to be alive.
 
In What’s Your Story?, Newbery Medal-winning author Marion Dane Bauer discusses how to write fiction from beginning to end, including creating a story plan, choosing the best idea, bringing characters to life, deciding on a point of view, creating realistic dialogue, keeping readers hooked, and revising and polishing the finished product.
 
“Her last comment is telling: ‘Knowing your craft can help you tell a story. But only by taking risks can you make art.’ After many pages of provocative information and straightforward counsel, that sentence may be the one to launch youngsters to the challenge. The book speaks directly to young writers, but many adults (teachers, librarians, reviewers, editors, would-be writers) will also find this sensible dissection of the storytelling process invaluable.”—Kirkus Reviews (starred review)
 
“A pragmatic, organized approach to story writing . . . the exercises and thought processes introduced as groundwork come across as stimulating rather than tedious and may serve to hone analytical skills as well as inspire even the most reluctant writers to try their hand.”—Publishers Weekly
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      March 30, 1992
      Bauer offers a pragmatic, organized approach to story writing in this 118-page manual geared for older children and young adults. Concrete, step-by-step tips are effectively illustrated with examples taken from the author's own works-- Face to Face , A Dream of Queens and Castles , Rain of Fire . Eight of the 14 chapters deal with preparatory rituals--finding a special time and place to write, inventing a conflict, understanding what makes a main character tick, figuring out a plot, choosing a point of view--and later chapters address more technical issues of pacing, rhythm and balance. Although the importance of discipline is stressed (learning to write a story is often compared to learning to play a sport or a musical instrument), the exercises and thought processes introduced as groundwork come across as stimulating rather than tedious and may serve to hone analytical skills as well as inspire even the most reluctant writers to try their hand. Ages 10-up.

    • School Library Journal

      Starred review from June 1, 1992
      Gr 5-9- -Newbery Honor medalist Bauer provides mentoring and practical and technical advice in this handy how-to book. By systematically exploring the components of fiction-plot, character, point of view, dialogue, beginnings and endings, and story tension, she shows how a story works and how to create one. Each chapter builds upon the previous one, reiterating essential points and putting them in understandable context. The clear and logical tone and evident respect for her audience speak to Bauer's sensitivity and empathy with those grappling with the creative process. As a result, this honest guide will be as useful to teachers as to young writers. For an audience midway between Carol Lea Benjamin's Writing for Kids (Crowell, 1985) and Stephen Policoff and Jeffrey Skinner's excellent Real Toads in Imaginary Gardens (Chicago Review Pr., 1991), this is a splendid choice for school, public, and home libraries. -Susan H. Patron, Los Angeles Public Library

    • Booklist

      April 15, 1992
      Gr. 5-10. Bauer's writing guide for kids avoids the usual extremes: she neither focuses rigidly on grammar exercises and minutiae of style nor floats away with sentiments about trusting your dreams. A fine fiction writer herself, winner of a Newbery Honor award, she's candid about the excitement and hard work that comes with learning to tell a good story. Without condescension but with a wealth of brief, witty, personal examples, she covers the basics of planning, writing, and revision. The practical details are here (keeping a journal, working with an editor, etc.) and also suggestions for inventing characters, building conflict, handling point of view and dialogue, moving beyond your own experience ("The secret is to find that place within yourself where feelings are strong and then to ask, What if. . . ?"). Occasionally she's a bit dogmatic about getting a "good balance" and structuring a plot. One wishes there was more acknowledgment of the mystery of the creative process. But that part of it can't be taught, and Bauer's small, attractively designed guide focuses on some things you can learn and practice. Her own clear style is the best show-and-tell for building "a world with words." ((Reviewed Apr. 15, 1992))(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 1992, American Library Association.)

    • The Horn Book

      January 1, 1992
      Bauer reveals the somber reality that writing can be hard work, though worth the effort for those who persevere. She provides a clear, concise elucidation on the elements of fiction, with chapters on the development of character, theme, plot, story tension, point of view, and dialogue as well as practical advice on revising. A thorough, clear, and functional approach to this topic.

      (Copyright 1992 by The Horn Book, Incorporated, Boston. All rights reserved.)

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