English, asked by yashwardhanjambotkar, 10 months ago

Extra polate about stories ending or life of characther after the story ends

Answers

Answered by Anonymous
2

\small\orange {\sf{Bonjour\ Mate!}}

\small\green {\sf{Answer }}

Six Types of Endings (and what they're used for)

1. Resolved Ending

2. Unresolved Ending

3. Ambiguous Ending

4. Unexpected Ending

5. Tied Ending

6. Expanded Ending

Seven Tips to Craft the Perfect Ending

1. Find your ending in the beginning

2. Completion goes hand-in-hand with hope

3. Keep things fresh

4. Make sure it’s really finished

5. Last impressions matter

6. Come full circle

7. Leave some things unsaid

Answered by saptarshi005
1

I include the ‘extrapolated ending’ as a final optional step in storytelling because some stories leave us with an open ending, in which case the work of finishing off is left up to the audience. Since audience members will vary on this, I like to consider it a separate step from the ‘New Equilibrium’ the author has chosen for us.

There is a very common sort of extrapolated ending in picture books — you can probably guess what it is.

It is often implied that the same adventure is about to happen all over again. Perhaps there will be a bit of a tweak. Picture books are unique in that they are the only book designed to be read at least fifty times by both a young and old audience, so this particular story structure encourages readers to think beyond the last page, and acknowledges that they’ll probably be back.

I hope this helps, have a nice day :))

Similar questions