The fairy tale of the June essay has many different related stories to choose from, so I decided to edit my own version of ABobby and Steven Up The Bean Stock @. Once upon a time there was a 15 year old boy named Bobby. Bobby is making his motocross track falling from the sky in front of him. He did not think anything, so he just kept building his jump, and he buried it on top of the jump. Bobby was thirsty, so he entered the house to drink a cup of Gatorade.
Welcome to the broken fairy tale world and a strange world. First of all - what is a "fairy tale"? A fairy tale is the story under the heading "Folk Story". There are many kinds of folk tales: tall stories, accumulated stories, and stories of animals from simple to complex. Sometimes we use folk tales and fairy tales in the same sense. Fairy tales are folk tales, folk tales are not always fairytales. Fairy tales are usually longer than most folk tales and occur long before. They often include some sort of royalty (including the kingdom of the gods) in the story, the hero performs a journey of his / her trials, they got some magical help on their way, It usually starts with "a long way past and far away" and says "I will end happily forever."
A fairy tale is a story designed for children, with elves, goblins, wizards, and fantasy fantasy and wonderful characters that are not inevitable. The term "fairy tale" seems to refer to magical scenes, magical scenes, or magical effects in stories, rather than the presence of fairytale characters in the story. Often fairy tales are traditional, many of which are handed down from Storyteller to Storyteller, then recorded in books. Fairy tales are important as they stimulate imagination. Before they experience them in the real world, they provide us a way to experience things in our minds. This is a place where you can satisfy the place where the troubles of the real world supernatural and mixed. In a fairy tale, everything can happen, all forms of creatures can exist, and when something happens, we can find a solution in the real world. By the imagination, we understand our world. You can explore the results and possibilities
As Loftis suggests, the purpose of a fairy tale (or literature) is not descriptive. That is not to show us the world (reality or imagination). Speaking of C. S. Lewis's fairy tale defense, Vox Day reminds us that the purpose of a fairy tale is to teach us about the courses applicable to our world. As a reader, I agree with Leslie Loftis. I am a little tired of moral talks. It tells us what you think about and how to behave, both from the left and from the right. Furthermore, I do not want to limit my reading to a "good" story with "right" ideas to protect me from "bad" stories and "bad ideas". I would like to read a book that exposes me to things I can not find in my daily life. If they have the idea of "good" or "bad", I would like to decide for themselves, thank you very much.