Wednesday, August 31, 2011

Why I love Writing :)

 When I was little, instead of playing on the playground with all my friends, I would sit inside and write stories. It all began in kindergarten, when we started tracing the little dotted letters on pages, over, and over, and over. I got the hang of it fairly quickly, and in the middle of the year, we began making those letters into words, and words into sentences. Every day we would have an assignment to write about what we did the previous day. I would always write a little more than I had to, and put a little picture at the top. Most of the kids took up half the page with a picture, but mine was small, and I filled up that picture space with more words. I remember the day when my teacher held up my paper and said "This is how you spell "baby." See how Caitlin did this?" I was so proud of myself for writing neatly and spelling a word all by myself. 

When we moved up to first grade, I was so excited to write stories. Our teacher gave us an assignment each week to write a four to five "half page short story", with card stock as the cover, and two or three pieces of paper folded in half, and stapled together. Only, I would write two to three of those stories a week, and I would never ever run out of topics to write on. I literally wrote stories from haunted houses to how I got my name. I felt really special when my story box was filled to the brim, and others' were only half-way full. I was so excited when I brought my box of stories home to show my mother. She told me that I had a real gift for writing, and that's when I understood that I did. She was so proud to see that I had written about our family, and the time that my little brother had an asthma attack and had to go to the hospital. I was overjoyed when I found out that our teacher was going to let us make an actual book! It had a hard cover, and twenty or so pages. I was ecstatic. I wrote my book about "Wild Horses" and even put a pretend organization to save the mustangs at the back of the book. Every day I would come into class, I would grab my book and start to work on it. It was a routine to me, one that I loved doing every day. I was so proud of my book, and at Publisher's Tea, I shared it with everyone. My picture partner was Blake Delacroix, who wrote "The Angry Sun" I still have that picture today.

Finally, we moved up into second grade. I was so excited for more writing. Our teacher gave us a red folder with one sheet of loose leaf in it. "Begin your journal with a title, and three paragraphs." she said. Well, of course I was going to challenge that. I took out a piece of loose leaf and stuck it behind the first in my red folder, and began to write. I wrote about how I felt that first day of second grade, and how I felt so grown up to be able to write an autobiography about myself with a journal. I wrote five to six paragraphs, each with more detail than the last. I was still writing when I heard the sighs and the gentle closing of the little red folders. Our teacher told us to put it away, but I just put it in my desk and continued to write. I brought my first grade book to school almost every day to show everyone what I wrote, but no one seemed to be interested. I put it off for a while, and did the same as I did in kindergarten and first grade. Sit out for recess and write about what everyone was doing. For example, I would write in extreme detail, "Max skipped over to the old, rusty green swing, and plopped down on it happily." Of course I used a lot of adjectives and adverbs, but I loved describing everything through writing.

I'm going to go ahead and skip to fourth grade, because third grade was just more writing in journals. In fourth grade, our old first grade teacher would come to our classroom every Wednesday and Thursday and teach us how to write exceptional paragraphs and detailed sentences. Her program was called "O.W.L" or Outstanding Writers Lab, and we would write haikus, and other poems. At this point, it was all about poems. I wrote one about a flame, and when the teacher saw it, she hung it up and left it there all year. I was so proud of being on the "wall of fame" because of my poetry. For the rest of the year, I tried to write at least one poem each day. When I couldn't think of a topic, I would look around the room and find something that could possibly be turned into a poem. A pen, a dusty old couch, the wall of fame, that one creaky desk in the corner, even the little spider that lived on the ceiling of the room. I wrote poetry about everything, and when my aunt came to babysit, I would make poems up on the spot, and recite them for her. I even figured out for myself that poetry didn't have to rhyme. A lot of the time I would rhyme, but occasionally, If I couldn't find a rhyme to a word, I wouldn't rhyme it, I would just find a good fitting word. I was the only one that seemed to have an interest in poetry, because when the teacher said write a haiku I heard the occasional grunt and whine, and the forever and always loud, exaggerated sighs from my classmates. The only thing that came from me was a big smile and my pen ready to write. The best part, I could write cursive then, so I could be all fancy when I wrote my haikus.

I'm going to skip to sixth grade now, because fifth grade, all we did was book reports. That was the only type of writing that I didn't like. In sixth grade, I began to write short chapter books, and it went on through eighth grade. Each year they would get more complex and a lot more detailed. The chapter books became into short stories, and those short stories became small novels. I worked on the stories tirelessly each year, and shared them with my teachers. They were so surprised that I stayed on task and didn't just give up, and they told me that I had a real gift for writing. At the end of the year, I wrote the story of my life at my old school which I loved and adored. The story was nine pages long (front and back) and the font size was ten. Everyone loved it, and it is now in the school office for anyone who wants to read it.

I've always loved writing dearly, almost more than anyone else did in lower and middle school. I still love to write today, as you can see by this essay. I had so much fun writing this, and I can't wait for another narrative because I know exactly what I'm going to write about. Every year, my love for writing grew, until it grew into an obsession, where I wrote at least three paragraphs every day. Writing is like a stress tool for me, whenever I write, I feel better, and I can write about how I feel or what I did that day and so on. Writing means so much to me and it should mean something to everyone else, too, because it expresses emotion and feeling, and hopefully, you felt some of my emotions in this story. Writing for me is like having your favorite thing right in front of you, wether it's food, an animal, or something else, that's what writing is like for me.

Monday, August 29, 2011

"Solitary" Reading Response #2

Okay, so I've decided to post another reading response. Alexander Gordon Smith is such a good author: He uses detailed vocabulary, and wonderful sentence flow. The organization of this book is fantastic, along with everything else, of course. Alexander organized this story so well, and put a lot of thought into it, something that would take me years to do. Sentence Fluency: Wow, amazing! It made me feel like I was part of the book, and the words just jumped right off the pages! Also, the Word Choice in this wonderful book was energetic and lively, full of suspense, and intensity. I really enjoyed all of the factors of this book.
Again, I would like to encourage you to read this series, because it is truly the first series that was so intense and suspenseful. Every part of it kept me reading until I couldn't read any more. I also liked the theme of the series, but you'll have to figure it out for yourselves, I can't just give it away!

Sunday, August 28, 2011

"Solitary" by Alexander Gordon Smith

This book is such a good one- I'm sure that this book is fit for anyone. "Solitary" is so intense and full of action, I couldn't stop reading once I started. I don't want to give anything away, so I won't summarize too much, but talk about how I felt while reading this amazing book. This book is the second out of four (so far!) from the Lockdown Series by Alexander Gordon Smith. The next review will be on "Death Sentence", the third in this series.
I felt like the little kid that says "NO! DON'T GO IN THE CLOSET, TIMMY!" All through this book. There were so many decisions that characters made, that you just knew were the wrong ones. I truly felt like I was "part of the book" because it was so detailed throughout the whole book. Every chapter, every sentence, was filled with action and excitement. It kept me reading, until I practically fell asleep. I reccomend this book to anyone 14+ only because of some scary things in the book. I give this book five stars, and two thumbs up!