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Answer You - Plotting a Children's Book
Debt Renegotiation: Know Your Options d cats. Er small, domestic cats. You'd probably be rooting for me (and my brood), hoping that the nasty lion goes away hungry.Debt is deceiving. If it weren't, we would have no problem with it. Debt satisfies a basic human desire, the desire to have it all right now.Today, we have access to easy credit for everything from furniture to automobiles. We no longer look at the total price of an item, but rather the amount of the monthly payment. This easy credit view of life is a slippery slope and once you get over the edge, it is almost impossible to recover.Do you use more than one credit card on a regular basis? Do you occasionally skip payments? Do you pay only the minimum payment required each month? Do you use a credit card to get cash The direction this plot takes depends on the main character - their personality, background and experiences. Animal abuser or little old lady with orphans? The animal abuser might feed her dogs to the lions then try to escape. The little old lady would probably feed herself to the lions to save the orphans – as a last resort. Every character has motivation – a reason to be in the story. The main character has motivation that the reader cares about i.e. the little old lady saving Internet Marketing Evolution In a previous article I explained the ideas behind some of my children's books. Over time, I've trained my brain to be on "alert" for ideas and I discover a lot more ideas than I have time to put pen to paper or fingers to laptop.The Web is often a high speed laboratory of evolution. If you add information to the Web and do nothing to promote it, your information will sleep quietly on a server and never traverse the fibers that make up the Web’s interconnectivity. On the other hand, some Web destinations become very popular with only a small amount of initial publicity. The first users – spreading the word through e-mail – can produce a tidal wave of visitors in no time. The vast majority of information on the Web falls somewhere between those extremes.Early on, most folks with something to sell recognized the potential inherent in the Web. Print ads and TV ad Not all ideas are equal. Some ideas work well and become books. Some ideas fail to develop. So how do we take an idea and develop it into a plot for a children’s book? How do we work out what to write once we have the initial idea? Here’s a basic plot outline: 1. A main character is introduced. It’s important to remember that a plot is supposed to help the writer and reader. Don’t adhere too closely to the above plot outline if it hinders your writing. Some writers prefer to work with a plot outline. Some writers don’t give plot a thought until they’ve finished the first draft. Do what works for you. Let’s look at some important elements of plot. The best plots come from characters. It's a character's personality, background and experiences that determine how he or she will react to certain situations, events or people. As a writer, you can come up with an idea. Where your idea goes - the plot - depends on your characters. Every idea can go off in many directions. More on this in a minute. A plot needs conflict or a problem to be interesting and entertaining. Sure, I can sit here and tell you the "plot" of my day. Ho hum! No one cares, other than me, and possibly my dogs. However, if I go outside and find a lion in my backyard, you'd probably become interested in my day. My day has a conflict or problem. What am I going to do? How am I doing to solve this problem? Can I solve this problem? Or will I become lion lunch? Okay, back to the character. Me. Imagine I've been abusing my dogs… Huh! They're asleep on my bed. Anyway, imagine that I'm abusive to animals. You'd probably be rooting for the lion, hoping that I get my just desserts. Or hoping that the lion gets its just desserts. Me! Now imagine that I'm a little old lady who takes in poor orphaned children and cats. Er small, domestic cats. You'd probably be rooting for me (and my brood), hoping that the nasty lion goes away hungry. The direction this plot takes depends on the main character - their personality, background and experiences. Animal abuser or little old lady with orphans? The animal abuser might feed her dogs to the lions then try to escape. The little old lady would probably feed herself to the lions to save the orphans – as a last resort. Every character has motivation – a reason to be in the story. The main character has motivation that the reader cares about i.e. the little old lady saving There is an Alternative to Flipping Burgers cles stand between the main character and their goal. I recently had a discussion with a colleague where he expressed a concern about the jobs available to his teenage daughter. It seemed her only choices were table waiting, pizza tossing, baby-sitting, fast-food delivery, or burger flipping. Those choices do not sound much different than when I was a teenager, but we have a thing called the Internet now and through it we do have alternatives.One alternative is online bookselling. It can be done by a responsible high school teenager or a college student needing an income with flexible hours. In the case of the high school student it might require the oversight and support of the pare 4. The main character reacts and new obstacles arise. 5. The main character reacts again and new obstacles arise. The tension is mounting. 6. All seems lost. But wait! 7. All is resolved as the story is brought to a satisfactory conclusion. It’s important to remember that a plot is supposed to help the writer and reader. Don’t adhere too closely to the above plot outline if it hinders your writing. Some writers prefer to work with a plot outline. Some writers don’t give plot a thought until they’ve finished the first draft. Do what works for you. Let’s look at some important elements of plot. The best plots come from characters. It's a character's personality, background and experiences that determine how he or she will react to certain situations, events or people. As a writer, you can come up with an idea. Where your idea goes - the plot - depends on your characters. Every idea can go off in many directions. More on this in a minute. A plot needs conflict or a problem to be interesting and entertaining. Sure, I can sit here and tell you the "plot" of my day. Ho hum! No one cares, other than me, and possibly my dogs. However, if I go outside and find a lion in my backyard, you'd probably become interested in my day. My day has a conflict or problem. What am I going to do? How am I doing to solve this problem? Can I solve this problem? Or will I become lion lunch? Okay, back to the character. Me. Imagine I've been abusing my dogs… Huh! They're asleep on my bed. Anyway, imagine that I'm abusive to animals. You'd probably be rooting for the lion, hoping that I get my just desserts. Or hoping that the lion gets its just desserts. Me! Now imagine that I'm a little old lady who takes in poor orphaned children and cats. Er small, domestic cats. You'd probably be rooting for me (and my brood), hoping that the nasty lion goes away hungry. The direction this plot takes depends on the main character - their personality, background and experiences. Animal abuser or little old lady with orphans? The animal abuser might feed her dogs to the lions then try to escape. The little old lady would probably feed herself to the lions to save the orphans – as a last resort. Every character has motivation – a reason to be in the story. The main character has motivation that the reader cares about i.e. the little old lady saving 8 Block Internet Marketing Formula To Get Your Visitors To Trust You and Give You Money what works for you.What if I show you how to increase sales of your products and services and also increase your website conversion ratio in just few simple steps.You need to understand the psychology of internet shoppers if you really want to shoot up your sales. This is what their mind says when he/she visits your website...1. Can I trust this person, I don't know him?2. Does he know the topic well enough?3. Is this a quality product?4. Who else has used this product and what are their opinions?5. Is my credit card at risk making payment from this website?6. Will I get value for the money I pay?7. Is th Let’s look at some important elements of plot. The best plots come from characters. It's a character's personality, background and experiences that determine how he or she will react to certain situations, events or people. As a writer, you can come up with an idea. Where your idea goes - the plot - depends on your characters. Every idea can go off in many directions. More on this in a minute. A plot needs conflict or a problem to be interesting and entertaining. Sure, I can sit here and tell you the "plot" of my day. Ho hum! No one cares, other than me, and possibly my dogs. However, if I go outside and find a lion in my backyard, you'd probably become interested in my day. My day has a conflict or problem. What am I going to do? How am I doing to solve this problem? Can I solve this problem? Or will I become lion lunch? Okay, back to the character. Me. Imagine I've been abusing my dogs… Huh! They're asleep on my bed. Anyway, imagine that I'm abusive to animals. You'd probably be rooting for the lion, hoping that I get my just desserts. Or hoping that the lion gets its just desserts. Me! Now imagine that I'm a little old lady who takes in poor orphaned children and cats. Er small, domestic cats. You'd probably be rooting for me (and my brood), hoping that the nasty lion goes away hungry. The direction this plot takes depends on the main character - their personality, background and experiences. Animal abuser or little old lady with orphans? The animal abuser might feed her dogs to the lions then try to escape. The little old lady would probably feed herself to the lions to save the orphans – as a last resort. Every character has motivation – a reason to be in the story. The main character has motivation that the reader cares about i.e. the little old lady saving Internet Article Marketing, On Steroids ogs.E-zines have been available on the Internet for quite sometime. They can take the form of scientific journals or newsletters, which organizations hand out to their supporters or subscribers, sometimes free of charge.The most common e-zines, however, contain articles written on a wide variety of topics tailored to fit the information needs of a general audience. Some articles will contain a resource box, where a few lines of text will tell readers who the author is, what his or her research interests are, and where he or she can be contacted.Such articles and their attached resource boxes can be referred to as article marketing, However, if I go outside and find a lion in my backyard, you'd probably become interested in my day. My day has a conflict or problem. What am I going to do? How am I doing to solve this problem? Can I solve this problem? Or will I become lion lunch? Okay, back to the character. Me. Imagine I've been abusing my dogs… Huh! They're asleep on my bed. Anyway, imagine that I'm abusive to animals. You'd probably be rooting for the lion, hoping that I get my just desserts. Or hoping that the lion gets its just desserts. Me! Now imagine that I'm a little old lady who takes in poor orphaned children and cats. Er small, domestic cats. You'd probably be rooting for me (and my brood), hoping that the nasty lion goes away hungry. The direction this plot takes depends on the main character - their personality, background and experiences. Animal abuser or little old lady with orphans? The animal abuser might feed her dogs to the lions then try to escape. The little old lady would probably feed herself to the lions to save the orphans – as a last resort. Every character has motivation – a reason to be in the story. The main character has motivation that the reader cares about i.e. the little old lady saving What the Heck is a Jumbo Mortgage Loan? d cats. Er small, domestic cats. You'd probably be rooting for me (and my brood), hoping that the nasty lion goes away hungry.You may have heard of the term jumbo mortgage loan and wondered what it means. Well, in this short article I will take you through the meaning and why it is important for you to understand it.In basic terms, if a mortgage loan exceeds a certain amount, it is considered a jumbo mortgage loan. Currently (as of 2006), a jumbo mortgage loan is a loan more than $417,000. The limit typically changes each year. In 2005, the amount was $357,650.The great part about a jumbo mortgage loan is the approval process is the same for conventional loans for most lenders. Unfortunately, the interest rate for a jumbo mortgage loan is typical The direction this plot takes depends on the main character - their personality, background and experiences. Animal abuser or little old lady with orphans? The animal abuser might feed her dogs to the lions then try to escape. The little old lady would probably feed herself to the lions to save the orphans – as a last resort. Every character has motivation – a reason to be in the story. The main character has motivation that the reader cares about i.e. the little old lady saving herself and her poor orphans from being lion lunch. Sometimes it’s the motivation of other characters that become obstacles to the main character reaching his or her goal i.e. the next-door neighbour wants the old lady and orphans to move out and therefore tries to assist the lion. He probably put the lion there in the first place. The best plots have tension. It’s the tension that keeps a reader involved in a story, that keeps them turning the pages. Most of us have had the feeling “I need to know what happens next”. The little old lady is about to be eaten. No, she’s not. Yes, she is. No, she's not. Keep building the tension. Your main character has a problem. They try to fix their problem. But the problem gets worse. They try to fix their problem. But problem gets worse. They try to fix the problem. Yay! They finally solve their problem. As you can see, every scene in a plotted story follows logically from the previous one. Plot makes the scenes appear connected. A picture book has simpler plots. For instance, "Tom is afraid of water" then took that idea off in many directions. The plot of this children's story comes from the character - Tom. How Tom will react to being afraid of water depends on Tom's personality, background and experiences. Other characters can become part of his problem or obstacles to resolving the problem. I thought about water and related topics. Then I asked myself questions - to give me ideas. I followed each of these ideas to see what could happen next. Hopefully, one of these possibilities will appeal to me and I’ll choose that one to work on. Remember a plot is about a character with a problem. Make that problem BIG. And if your story begins to snooze, then give your character more problems. As I mentioned earlier, one idea can go off in many directions. You may prefer to work with a list. This happens. Then this happens. Then this happens. You may prefer to work without a plot. Give your character obstacles, not yourself. Do what works for you.
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