i just slipped the quote in.
my entire creative writing was dialogue -- no "he said" or "she said", just dialogue, and you determine who's talking to who through the language they use and when they refer to each other by name.
i think i pulled it off well.
it used (a) and was referring to imaginary people -- it was about a young boy who had an imaginary friend and some imaginary enemies. he was putting his mother through loads of stress, and he was getting really paranoid about these enemies. the boy (Don) was really defensive about his imaginary friend (Jeremy) being real, until he meets a cross-eyed kid -- you know where you aren't sure if they're looking at you or not? Don thought he was always looking at Jeremy, and thought that he was becoming the 'imaginary' friend and Jeremy was becoming 'real'. tense argument, a bit of stress, with Don's mum rescuing him. from then on, no more Jeremy, and no more imaginary enemies.
it's the weirdest thing i've ever written, so i'm not sure what to expect. i don't think it answers the question too well, though.
~untitled~ said:
Lol. I wrote about Amish people... But i think everyone thought it was stupid as opposed to actually amusing.
what's wrong with writing about amish people? it sounds unique to me. good onya.
Gigabyte89 said:
Did anyone else write about Wilson?
i hadn't thought of that. i'd be interested in reading that story.
julz
julz