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Nervous Anxious Curious Afraid Excited. Raise your hand to describe how you feel 5 minutes before you are able to open your report card. Nervous Anxious Curious Afraid Excited. Raise your hand to describe how you feel 5 minutes before you are able to open your report card. suspense.
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Nervous Anxious Curious Afraid Excited Raise your hand to describe how you feel 5 minutes before you are able to open your report card.
Nervous Anxious Curious Afraid Excited Raise your hand to describe how you feel 5 minutes before you are able to open your report card. suspense
Today’s Question Does foreshadowing build suspense for future events? How?
Suspense Suspense – anxious curiosity about what will happen next in the storysome Genres that are suspenseful:some short storieshorrorthrillersmysteriesetc.
What is she doing that shows she is feeling this way? Draw a stick person version of this picture Show the facial expressions This woman is feeling the suspense. In other words, she is feeling the anxious curiosity about what will happen next in the story If an author describes facial expression in this way – he is trying to build suspense! What is Suspense?
What is Suspense? If an author makes you question what is going to happen next, and doesn’t tell you the answer right away or “leaves you hanging” then that is SUSPENSE Draw this picture.
What does suspense feel like when reading a book? Anxious Curiosity = You can’t put the story down until you know what happens • On your paper, describe a scene in The Lightning Thief was suspenseful or full of suspense. What part was suspenseful for you? • Turn and Talk about it.
Review: What is Suspense? anxious curiosity about what will happen next in the story • Heading: “Ways to Build Suspense”
Ways to Build Suspense 1. Foreshadowing • Hints or clues suggesting what will happen later in the story.
One way that writers create suspense in a story is to foreshadow, or hint at, future events. If someone throws a brick through a character’s window, we have a hint that something dangerous may happen in the character’s future. A writer uses foreshadowing to plant interesting clues for the reader.
Title or names of characters Pictures Flashbacks Setting: names of places, description of the place Personification (verb – personify) – describing objects as if they are acting like people would Repetition – repeating of words, sounds, or actions Narrator’s voice (describe it and tell how you could make the narrator’s voice suspenseful) Complications - events in the story that complicate the protagonists life subheading:8 Ways an author can foreshadow future events
Reread HR 32-35 Does foreshadowing build suspense for future events? How? You will turn in these notes/answers today. 20 points
Review of Key Terms in the slides to follow:
Narrator – character or non-character that is telling the story (Not the same as the author)
Flashback– when the narrator or a character thinks back to an event in the past and tells the reader about it *Flashbacks can be a way to foreshadow future events and can build suspense
Copy into notes:Personification – when something that is not a person is described as a person (verb – to personify)Repetition – the repeating of words, sounds, or actions
Complications -Events that make it more difficult for the protagonist to get what he/she wants. These events happen before the climax during the rising action.
Genre – type or category of writingMotivation – reasons why a character did what they did