Imagination Or Magic ?: Be Careful What You Wish For
Russell Howerton
language
(, Oct. 6, 2019)
First of all, I must warn you.THERE ARE NO ILLUSTRATIONS IN THIS STORY.Gasp !!I'm not a big fan of illustrations in a story, and there is not enough space here to explain why. The very, very short explanation is I have the feeling that illustrations/pictures inhibit imagination. OH MY!Of course, I could be completely wrong.I will put a more detailed explanation in my "bio".This is a quick, to the point, story about the power of imagination. The setting is a teacher on an imaginary field trip with a small group of third grade children.There are moments of fear, stress, triumph, and ultimately, victory. It has multiple types of wild animals, a forest, a river, and one very bland, non-descriptive death of a reptile.The rest of this description will give you a bit of insight into why the story was written the way it was. It might, and I hope it will, make the story even more interesting.I used to lead a Junior Great Books (JGB) class at the local elementary school. At the end of each semester, at the next-to-last JGB class, I would ask each of the children to suggest one thing, anything, (a storm, a lion, an oak tree, etc.). I would then create a story that contained each of those items.In some of my stories each child's name is associated with the item they asked for. This is one of those stories.For example:Chance wanted 501 zebras. Why 501 instead of any other number? I didn't ask. That was what he wanted so that's what is in the story. Simple as that.The very first time I wrote one of these stories and read it to the class, I realized I had struck gold. Their eyes absolutely glowed as they heard a story they themselves had created.When they went back to their home room classes, they told their teacher, and their friends, and within a day or two I was invited to those rooms to read the story again.I have several of these stories and some "artifact" stories (see my bio) and might decide to publish them as well.Remember, my biography has much more info about who I am. It might also give you some idea of why I write the way I do.