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Loading... The Anatomy of Curiosityby Maggie Stiefvater, Tessa Gratton, Brenna Yovanoff
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Fantasy.
Mythology.
Young Adult Fiction.
HTML: The follow-up to the acclaimed title The Curiosities: A Collection of Stories by Maggie Stiefvater, Tessa Gratton, and Brenna Yovanoff. In an unassuming corner of Brooklyn, a young woman learns to be ladylike, to love context, and to speak her mind from a very curious sort of tutor. In a faraway land convulsed by war, a young soldier hears the desert's curious hum as he disarms bombs with the person he doesn't know how to love. In a place so shriveled by drought that any drowning is a curiosity, a young writer tries again and again to tread water beneath the surface of a vast and unusual sea. Three new stories—complete with commentary on the creative process—from three acclaimed young adult authors working at the height of their powers. Curious? .No library descriptions found. |
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Google Books — Loading... GenresMelvil Decimal System (DDC)808.3Literature Literature, rhetoric & criticism Rhetoric and collections of literary texts from more than two literatures Rhetoric of fictionLC ClassificationRatingAverage:
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These three ladies have such radically different approaches to writing. You will probably wonder how on earth such different individuals can possibly be critique partners. By the end you will come to understand that. You will also understand that marching to your own drum does not mean that you will fail. It just means you need to know what works for you.
The stories themselves were good as well. Ladylike is a slowly building thriller that develops a friendship between species. I loved this story. It was brilliant and delightful. It also illustrated that sometimes you foreshadow without intending to and in your editing you might want to tweak what you foreshadow.
Desert Canticle is a beautifully crafted tale of love. The twist will blow you over, then you will realize the breadcrumbs were there, you just didn't pick them up.
The final story, or rather set of stories, were just so-so for me. But I don't like reading that genre of storytelling no matter who writes it.
All-in-all an invaluable tool. ( )