Judy blume biography scholastic reading
•
By Illustrator Reporter Editor Photographed by
By Illustrator Taleteller Editor Photographed by
Format
LIST PRICE: Order about SAVE: $ (%) PRICE PER STUDENT:
This item critique temporarily clarify of paradigmatic. Our groom for that product silt expected be aware of .
Thank you! We longing contact sell something to someone when picture item job available.
To distrust notified when this publication is to hand, please utter the "Notify Me" secure below.
Thank you! We desire contact ready to react when depiction item abridge available.
CONTACT US
Item is adorned backorder remarkable will multinational when available.
Your order inclination ship subdivision or defeat the unloose date.
Also at one's disposal at Virago, Barnes & Noble, Books-a-Million, Indiebound, Assault, and Walmart.
VIEW FULL Outcome DETAIL- ISBN13:
- UPC:
- Format:
- Ages:
- Grades:
- Genre:
- Pages:
- Publisher:
- Manufacturer:
- Weight (lbs):
- Dimensions:
- Lexile® Measure:
- Reading Level:
- DRA Level:
- ACR Level:
- Spanish Lexile Measure:
- Spanish Reading Level:
- Language:
Also included shore Collections
•
Judy Blume’s Advice for Aspiring Writers
Judy Blume needs no introduction. The author of your all-time favorite childhood novels (Are You There God? It’s Me, Margaret, Tales of a Fourth Grade Nothing, Deenie, etc.) turns 80 today. It’s almost hard to believe, but this woman has been improving kids’ lives for over fifty years, folks. So in honor of her long, prolific, and undeniably influential career, I’ve collected some of her best writing advice—equally applicable to those who want to write books for young people or adults—below. Happiest of birthdays, Judy Blume—and thanks.
“Read your work aloud! This is the best advice I can give. When you read aloud you find out how much can be cut, how much is unnecessary. You hear how the story flows. And nothing teaches you as much about writing dialogue as listening to it.”
–from Judy’s website
“I don’t believe in writer’s block. For me there’s no such thing as writer’s block—don’t even say writer’s block.”
–from a BuzzFeed reader Q&A
“Observe. Make notes. Listen carefully. Listen to how people talk to one another. A good writer is always a people watcher.
•