Firstly, to the left is a picture of Zora, the writer of this paragraph. Today, I am going to give you some tips.
Firstly, writing.
As I have been writing since I was little, I have lots of experience. Here are some tips for writing books, narratives, and essays:
Books:
Depends if it is fiction or non fiction.
Fiction:
Normally fiction books have magic in them, or something that has never happened. For example, the book I am writing now (Audrey is illustrating it.) has a time machine.
In all stories, I would recommend already knowing what is going to happen, the main characters, and some of the most important parts ready in your mind. In a narrative, I often write things that have happened in my life. That doesn't mean you have to stick straight to the story. You can over exaggerate. It just makes things more exciting. For example, in one of my narratives, I put in, "And my friend was shaking with fear." Now, my friend at the moment was not shaking with fear, she was just scared. That means that it just shows strongly how the person feels.
Non fiction:
Science is usually good for non fiction. In non fiction, you usually want to stick straight to the facts, because you don't want to over exaggerate in science.
Realistic fiction:
For realistic fiction, I would recommend using something with characters that act like normal people, and dogs that don't talk, because, well... dogs don't talk in real life, do they? And you want to get as closest to real life as possible with realistic fiction.
Anyway, I have to go!
I hope the tips help. Look down to see the dictionary!
Dictionary:
non fiction: A story that is true.
fiction: A story that is make believe.
realistic fiction: Something that is not true but could have happened, and in most cases someone has a similar story to it.

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