Post by account_disabled on Dec 13, 2023 0:48:17 GMT -5
Below I offer some useful advice that I myself aim to follow every time I deal with teenagers: clarity : using words that fit their way of expressing themselves. We abolish the search terms because we don't have to surprise them with our dictionary but with the plot; speed : avoid too long and convoluted periods and endless descriptions with the risk of boredom and abandonment of reading so as not to resume it even under torture; think like a teenager : for an adult it is complicated but it is enough to eliminate the external layers of hypocrisy.
I mean, there are many Phone Number Data topics to cover, let's try to amaze ourselves first and then our kids, perhaps by inserting an element that they are pA**ionate about; interest (here I refer to the previous point): read up, why not?, ask the public involved what their interests are and what they like to read. Including a sport or other activity stimulates and engages the minds of young people; commitment : making a book interesting in the same way you would work if it were aimed at an adult audience.
Being young is not synonymous with inexperience and it is especially young people who are the most critical regarding the aesthetics of a job; concentration (and here I tie in with the point above): the same rules apply to fiction aimed at children as to other genres. Dedicating yourself to a young audience does not mean writing for a less cultured audience and therefore "violating" the basic rules of writing a good product. Far be it from me to draw up a handbook; rather I wrote this post to make some small suggestions, perhaps even obvious, but which we often tend to ignore even though we know that they are fundamental for starting a work of a certain importance.
I mean, there are many Phone Number Data topics to cover, let's try to amaze ourselves first and then our kids, perhaps by inserting an element that they are pA**ionate about; interest (here I refer to the previous point): read up, why not?, ask the public involved what their interests are and what they like to read. Including a sport or other activity stimulates and engages the minds of young people; commitment : making a book interesting in the same way you would work if it were aimed at an adult audience.
Being young is not synonymous with inexperience and it is especially young people who are the most critical regarding the aesthetics of a job; concentration (and here I tie in with the point above): the same rules apply to fiction aimed at children as to other genres. Dedicating yourself to a young audience does not mean writing for a less cultured audience and therefore "violating" the basic rules of writing a good product. Far be it from me to draw up a handbook; rather I wrote this post to make some small suggestions, perhaps even obvious, but which we often tend to ignore even though we know that they are fundamental for starting a work of a certain importance.