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Child
Literature Magazines
Child Literature
Magazines are for children interested in literature.
Child Literature has been regarded since its inception as the preeminent periodical in its field. Each issue contains articles covering the works of several American authors from colonial to contemporary as well as an extensive book review
section and an Announcements section that keeps readers up-to-date on prizes, competitions, conferences, grants, and publishing opportunities.
Child Literature Magazines Provide articles by noted authors, profiles of authors and illustrators, annotated book lists, teacher guides to notable books, research updates, reviews of children's books and reviews of professional books.
If your child has a desire to write words that masses will read.
You should pick up Child Literature Magazines at least a few times for
reference material. Inside, one comes across articles offering advice to fiction writers, non-fiction writers, magazine writers, short story writers, poetry writers--pretty much any avenue your interest lies in is covered in these pages. The advertisements offer your
child a plethora of venues for publishers looking for new authors, as well as supplies, contests and other information.
There is nothing quite like seeing your child words in print in a magazine on a stand. You find yourself buying up issues to mail to
friends and family members, and trying to figure out a way to display it so visitors to your home can see
their name on the article. The stories of our childhood have the most power. They're the ones we think and wonder about when we're at that stage where we wonder most. And as we grow up, they're still there, in the deepest parts of our brains, still being worked out. Characters, incidents, plot, word-making, language-all there just to tell a story.
Read stories from Child Literature Magazines especially chosen to be shared between parents and children, as well as nonfiction articles on topics of interest to children, and reviews of recent children's books.
At a time when many of our children are over-scheduled and over-stressed; we must ask ourselves what role(s) literature can play in their lives.
Child Literature Magazines, for example, drawn from children's stories offer a different and exciting approach for child readers.
An understanding of how authors and illustrators use compositional elements in their creation of
Child Literature Magazines not only increases readers' appreciation; it assists them in their own work as composers.
All children have a right to poetry in their lives. In the best of all possible worlds, they would have rich experiences with nursery rhymes, interactive dialogue, and other forms of language play as infants and toddlers; and the enjoyment and power of poetic language would continue to flourish throughout their school years. |