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Errors of the famous - help for the aspiring author
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message 51:
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Ken
(new)
Dec 15, 2013 03:55PM
I may have misjudged your position, because on that I agree!
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Kenneth wrote: "I may have misjudged your position, because on that I agree!"Anyone who can appreciate an ancient Chinese strategy game and make a serious study of cause and effect has just got to have a logical mindset.
Jim wrote: "Micah wrote: "Well, I think we can both preserve the magic of childhood and prepare them for the harshness of adult life. I mean, look at The Hobbit (the book, of course)...It's written in a very s..."This times a million. I'm a big horror buff, so this might sound hypocritical, but gore and horror for the sake of it just aren't a good idea outside of certain parts of the genre. We can teach children without terrifying them, and I think it's important to balance the bad with the good. Sure, the world can be a damn scary place, but there are some wonderful people in it too.
L.G. wrote: "We can teach children without terrifying them, and I think it's important to balance the bad with the good."I agree. I recently published a fantasy novel where one of the characters is killed. I spoke with my 11 year old daughter about this and she pleaded with me not to kill any of the good guys. I had to ignore the pleading so I could show the reality of battle. It's easy to accept bad people dying but the truth is that good people also die. I made sure that the book did not have any graphic violence though. This was my way to show the reality without scarring them.
"I had always imagined that my first experience with a friend's death would be dramatic. My daydreams always involved me bravely comforting my dying comrade with encouraging words while he tried to console me by giving a brief, heroic speech. It wasn't like that at all. There is nothing dramatic or heroic about death; it is depressing and permanent. Those left behind ache terribly inside because their hearts have been broken and never completely heal."Quote from "Levels". (Page 77)
Books mentioned in this topic
Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire (other topics)Northanger Abbey (other topics)
The March of Folly: From Troy to Vietnam (other topics)
A Distant Mirror: The Calamitous 14th Century (other topics)

