English, asked by ndduhan1995, 11 months ago


Story Writing

Tanya- summer vacation - Parents go to work-
gets boared alone- complaints life is boring -no children of her age to play -parents promise- will go out in the weekend- new neighbours - Varsha and her parents -also feel in summer vacation - parents leave for work -Tanya visit Varsha - Varsha blind, but always happy -a helper to assist her - shares toyes , books with Tanya - reads story books in Barille - listen to music - sies near an open window - listen to the song of birds - Tanya like her - often visit each other's house - play together - listen to music - watch television - Tanya never complaints again - realises the precious gifts of life - most of all ability to see.
write story and title and moral(150-200)​

Answers

Answered by suhani23476
1

Explanation:

Picture books are as varied as the potions in a witch’s cupboard. Some are spicy and bubbly, while others are mellow and sweet. So which kinds of stories are editors and agents clamoring for? Well, their tastes are just as varied. But one thing that seems to be on everyone’s wish list is this: character-driven stories. A few examples include FANCY NANCY by Jane O’Connor, LLAMA LLAMA RED PAJAMA by Anna Dewdney, PINKALICIOUS by Elizabeth Kann, RUSSELL THE SHEEP by Rob Scotton, SKIPPYJON JONES by Judy Schachner, PETE THE CAT by Eric Litwin, LADYBUG GIRL by David Soman and Jacky Davis, MAX AND RUBY by Rosemary Wells, and SCAREDY SQUIRREL by Mélanie Watt. As you can see, character-driven books have great series potential and overall marketing potential. When readers fall in love with a character, they want to read more about him/her, and it’s fun to visualize what other sorts of situations the character may get into.

This doesn’t mean that character-driven stories are the only kinds that sell or do well in the marketplace. Nor does it mean that writers should focus primarily on pleasing editors or following trends. The best writing comes from the heart! But with that in mind, if you want to explore the possibilities of a character-driven story, here is one quick and easy recipe for brewing up a strong concept. Two ingredients are all you need!

Personality Trait

Conflicting Goal

I recommend you start off with a list of your own personality traits. This will make it easy for you to feel an emotional connection with (and understanding of) the trait.

My list might look something like this:

introverted

joker

nerdy

perfectionist

quiet

creative

analytical

messy

quirky

worrier

please mark me as brain liest

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