Wednesday, November 23, 2005

The TAKE FIVE contest is complete and our winners have been announced in the April/May issue of Writing Magazine. Thank you to everyone who submitted their work.

TAKE FIVE!

Enter Writing magazine's 2005-2006 writing contest! Not sure how to get started? Allow us to give you a hand. We've picked six interesting objects for you to write about.

1) red bicycle
2) elephant
3) chicken noodle soup
4) umbrella
5) shadow
6) key

Your job is to take five. That is, choose five of these six objects and use them to write a poem, a story (fiction), or an essay (nonfiction). You may include the five objects in your writing in any way you'd like. Just be creative and have fun! If you have any questions, e-mail us at writing@weeklyreader.com.

CONTEST RULES – PLEASE READ CAREFULLY!

The competition is open to students in grades 5–12.

Twelve winners will be chosen.

Entries will be judged by the following grade levels: Middle (grades 5-6), Junior (grades7-8), High (9-10), and Senior (11-12).

Poems should be no longer than 400 words, and stories and essays should not exceed 800 words.

Winners will be chosen by the editors of Writing.

Each winner will receive $50. Winning poems, stories, and essays will be published in the April/May issue of Writing or on our Web site. Each entry must include your full name, address, phone number, e-mail address (if you have one), school name and address, parent or guardian’s signature, and teacher’s signature. Entries received without all of the above will not be accepted.

You must tell us which five objects you used and which object you discarded.

Entries must be received no later than December 2, 2005. Any entry received after the deadline will not be accepted.

Mail contest entries to this address:
Take Five! Writing Contest
Writing Magazine
200 First Stamford Place
P.O. Box 120023
Stamford, CT 06912-0023

Or you can e-mail contest entries to: writing@weeklyreader.com 

Best of luck to all!


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StudentWriter    Posted by
StudentWriter
on 11/23/2005
10:16 AM
 Friday, November 18, 2005

The DVD of Charlie and the Chocolate Factory was finally released last Wednesday, November 9. We asked readers of Writing to compare the book to the movie and to tell us what they liked better.

Here's what some of them had to say:

I would have to say the movie is better than the book. I say this because for one, I'm not too crazy about reading. Another thing is I think even though the movie was less detailed than the book, I like the modern twist to it. In the book, the oompa loompas were little dancing midgets, while in the movie they were renamed as rock stars. Another thing that I think made the movie better was that in the movie you actually know how everything was supposed to look and how the characters were supposed to look and how their faces react to certain things. What I mean by this is that a picture can mean 1,000 words. These are my reasons for liking the movie better than the book. -- Bob E., Grade 7


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Sandhya    Posted by
Sandhya
on 11/18/2005
12:38 PM
 Wednesday, November 16, 2005

In The Missing Manatee by Cynthia DeFelice, 11-year old Skeet Waters finds a dead manatee. He tries to track down the killer and .... (well, you have to read the book to find out what happens next!)

On page 46, Skeet says:

"When I finally got to sleep, I had some very weird dreams. The manatee killer appeared. As I fought him, he turned into a giant hammerhead shark, laughing at me, his big mouth open to show rows of shark teeth."

Write about one of your crazy dreams. Submit it to us.


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Anastasia    Posted by
Anastasia
on 11/16/2005
2:21 PM
 Tuesday, November 15, 2005

I'm getting on a plane tomorrow. I'm flying across the country. Washington State, here I come! (See, I have to say "Washington State" because, living on the East Coast, when I say just "Washington", people assume I mean D.C. It's exactly like when we say we're going to "New York" we usually mean New York City. Hmm... it's a Connecticut thing.)

Longest parenthetical ever!

Anywho... I love to fly. I hardly ever do it which makes each trip a special one. What I don't love is trying to pick out a book for the flight. This morning I was going absolutely nuts as I stared into my many bookshelves. What is the perfect airplane novel? Man, it's tough.

Last time I was on a plane, I flew to California. I brought with me The Confessions of Max Tivoli. Great great book. Max is born as an old man and ages backward through his life. So it was wild reading as I flew west across three time zones and landed in the past.


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Bryon    Posted by
Bryon
on 11/15/2005
1:45 PM


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