Monday, April 13, 2020

Discuss a book with the kids.




After they read a book (or see a movie or a stage play) you can discuss the book with them. Good leading questions about a work of fiction might be
1.  Who is the hero/heroine (protagonist is a unisex word that covers both sexes).  What motivates the protagonist?  What does the protagonist do?  Is it successful?
2. Who is the view point character?  (Dr. Watson is the classic fictional view point character).  Often the protagonist is the view point character.
3.  Who is the villain?  What makes him/her evil? 
4.  Does this story follow the classic story outline?  
   Protagonist is faced with a challenge of some sort.  He/she attempts to deal with the challenge.  The first (and perhaps some later challenges) overwhelm the protagonist.  At the climax of the story the protagonist makes one last do of die effort to deal with his challenge.  He/She either wins or looses, winning is customary but not necessary.  All after the climax is anti-climax.  Is the anti-climax (if present) necessary?  When do we readers learn what the challenge is?  And what might the challenge be?  How much does the outcome depend upon the protagonist's skill and cunning?  And how much upon pure good luck?  What is the anti-climax (if there is one) and is it necessary to the story.  
5.  Is it one of those modern stories where the protagonist merely serves as a punching bag thru out the story?  Like Catcher in the Rye.
6.  Is the protagonist believable and realistic?
7.  What shelf in the bookstore does this book belong on?  Romances?  Mysteries? Science fiction and fantasy?  Historical novels?  The everything else shelf? 

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