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Writing & Illustrating Prompts With Jeanette Stampone

About Jeanette
Jeanette Stampone was born in a three-hundred-year-old English house and grew up with stories of local legends, pixies, ghosts, and fairies. When Jeanette was a child, she had interesting pastimes including camping in the backyard for the entire school holidays and organising snail races. Jeanette has now retired from her snail manager job and lives in a small country town in WA with her husband and two boys.

About Shadow and the Girl
Shadow and the Girl is a picture book about a shadow who tries to run away from a giant girl. Soon Shadow realises she is stuck to the girl and there is no escape. This book explores friendship, fear and self-acceptance.

It is written by me, illustrated by Demelsa Haughton and published by Red Paper Kite.

The Hardest Thing About Writing this Book
The most difficult thing about writing this book was trying to get a good idea out of my head and onto paper. Shadow began as a monster but that didn’t work. Then Shadow was playing in the girl’s room but that didn’t work either. So I ended up changing the whole scene and beginning the story outside in the park. Finally, it worked! This process alone took about six months.

The Most Fun Thing About Writing this Book
The most fun I had was when I saw the initial drawings from the illustrator, Demelsa. It was so magical to see how she had imagined the story from reading my words. It was so different and better than I could have ever dreamt of! Just amazing.

Prompts

Illustration – Draw your own shadow but consider how your emotions and personality may shape your shadow.

Writing – Imagine you are a shadow but it’s night and completely dark. If there’s no light to cast any shadows, where do you go and what do you do? Write a short story based on this theme.

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Wednesday Writing Prompt With Kaye Baillie

About the Author

Kaye Baillie is an award-winning children’s author and has been making up stories since she was a kid on the orchard where she grew up. She has always loved writing and typing and as a teenager picked one hundred cases of apricots during the scorching summer fruit season so she could buy her very own second-hand typewriter. Kaye’s favourite things to write are humorous short stories which often appear in The School Magazine, and fiction and non-fiction picture books.

About Great Big Softie

Great Big Softie is about fitting in and feeling accepted. It’s also about knowing right from wrong and being brave to stand up for what’s right.

Elliot is a great big softie. But to fit in with the other monsters he decides to perform some monstrous deeds. After scaring a little girl on her bike, he must decide whether to continue being monstrous or follow his heart.

Great Big Softie is illustrated by the amazing Shane McG and published by New Frontier Publishing

The Hardest Thing About Writing Great Big Softie

In the scene where Elliot stands outside the little girl’s house, I wanted it to be unclear about what Elliot will do next. At the same time, I wanted to hint that he has decided not to do what the other monsters expect of him. It’s a lot to capture in one image. 

The Most Fun Thing About Writing This Book

When Elliot goes on his rampage and causes quite a bit of damage, it was so much fun to make up the scenes, write the dialogue and then see how Shane’s illustrations brought the scenes to life. It’s so funny to see Elliot land in the swimming pool!

A Writing Prompt based on the book

In Great Big Softie, Elliot barges into a gift shop, grabs food from the churros van then causes a gigantic splash at the pool.

If you had to write scenes that show three places where a monster causes trouble, where would those places be and what would your monster do?

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