TOP THREE NARRATIVE NONFICTION MISSTEPS
Nonfiction is basically broken into two broad types. Expository nonfiction describes, explains, and informs. Narrative nonfiction uses story elements to convey a factual experience. Narrative nonfiction tells a story through carefully researched, factual recounting. Not all nonfiction books are strictly expository or strictly narrative. Some in fact contain both, but for now, Jan Fields has given us a lead on common missteps when writing narrative nonfiction.
Finding Your Character's Childlike Voice | Writing for Children 184
The Big Effect of Dialogue Attribution | Writing for Children 183
Interview with Kate DiCamillo | Writing for Children 182
Revision: Don't Go It Alone | Writing for Children 181
Renée LaTulippe | Writing for Children 180
Failure is Proof of Effort | Writing for Children 179
Revision Power Tips | Writing for Children 178
Browbeaten into Submission | Writing for Children 177
Break into Publishing | Writing for Children 176
6 Steps to Submission Success | Writing for Children 175
Assembling Your Submission Package | Writing for Children 174
Interview with Emma Walton Hamilton | Writing for Children 173
Borrowing the Knowledge You Need | Writing for Children 172
Pitfalls of Research | Writing for Children 171
Finding Markets for Your Writing | Writing for Children 170
Interview with Susan Campbell Bartoletti | Writing for Children 169
Reshaping Your Story Part 2 | Writing for Children 168
Reshaping Your Story Part 1 | Writing for Children 167
Revision: Don't Go It Alone | Writing for Children 166
Interview with Renee LaTulippe | Writing for Children 165
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