HISTORICAL FICTION stories revolve around a particular event, time period, circumstance. These stories are “written to portray a time
period or convey information about a specific time period or an historical
event.” A youth’s role is important in the development of the story and takes
time to develop in a chapter book
format. Characters may be fictional, or based on real-life characters. In
historical fiction, the setting is crucial in telling the story because of its
historical significance. EXAMPLES: Bud, Not Buddy, Stones in Water, Number the
Stars, Esperanza Rising, Al Capone Does my Shirts.
REALISTIC FICTION “features main characters of approximately the age (or slightly older than) the book's intended audience. The books present a real-world problem or challenge and show how a young person solves that problem. By nature, children's realistic fiction is positive and upbeat, show young readers how they too can conquer their problems. When written for young readers (up to 12 years old.” Realistic fiction focuses on characters dealing with contemporary issues of which the reader will be able to relate. EXAMPLES: Authors such as Jerry Spinelli, Beverly Cleary, Gary Paulsen, Matt Christopher, Cynthia Leitich-Smith write in this genre.
TRADITIONAL
LITERATURE: stories
that are passed down from generation to generation, changing slowly over time
are called traditional literature. In many ways, this is what makes them
so fascinating - they provide a link between the past and the future.
INFORMTIONAL BOOKS or NON-FICTION “are designed to help
readers learn more about real things. They provide young readers
information without the literary devises common to fiction.”
BIOGRAPHY
is a form of non-fiction based on the life a real person written by someone
else.
AUTOBIOGRAPHY is a form of non-fiction about the life and work of a person written
by that person.
MODERN FANTASY requires readers to “suspend their disbelief” as the imaginative story unfolds in chapter book
format. Modern Fantasy stories rely on the premise that the content could not really happen in real life.
EXAMPLES:
POETRY involves
verse, rhythm, rhyme, writing styles, literary devices, symbolism, analogies,
and metaphors natural to our storytelling sensibilities. Jack Prelutsky and Shel Silverstein
are two of the most famous poets writing for children.
Source: Children’s Genre at
http://www.breitlinks.com/my_libmedia/children's_genres.htm
GRAPHIC NOVELS (coined by Wil Eisner) are our beloved comic strips and comic books. Those bubbles of
text describing what the character is saying, is this genre’s trademark.
Fiction or nonfiction book can be made into a graphic novel genre. EXAMPLES: Captain Underpants http://www2.scholastic.com/browse/book.jsp?id=2679
by Dave Pilkey & Bone http://www2.scholastic.com/browse/book.jsp?id=4080 by Jeff
Smith
MANGA http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=4472410 (“humorous pictures”) is the Japanese comic book genre which is very popular among young and
old in
Source:
Manga 101 at http://comicbooks.about.com/od/manga/ss/manga101.htm
SCIENCE FICTION genre involves stories that are told in settings beyond the Earth’s
setting and involve futuristic technology beyond our present limitations. Genre
Rodenburry (Star Trek) and Ray Bradbury wrote in this
genre. Twilight Zone television
series was an example.
Children's Literature Genres
·
AUTOBIOGRAPHYis a form of non-fiction about the life
and work of a person written by that person.
·
BIOGRAPHY is a form of non-fiction based on the life a real person written
by someone else.
·
FANTASY (MODERN
FANTASY) requires readers to “suspend their disbelief” as the
imaginative story unfolds in chapter book format. Modern Fantasy stories rely
on the premise that the content could not
really happen in real life.
EXAMPLES:
·
FOLKLORE (Traditional
Folklore) stories that are passed down from generation to generation,
changing slowly over time are called traditional literature. In many
ways, this is what makes them so fascinating - they provide a link between the
past and the future.
·
Folktales
help explain things about life, nature and humanity.
·
Fairy
Tales involve magic elements where good is rewarded and evil punished
·
Fables
are short stories that teach lessons with a moral ending. Fables are credited
to Aesop (6th century)
·
Legends
reveal the adventures and story of a person, place or thing.
·
Myths
explain the world, natural phenomena and our relationship with origins of
things, people and gods.
·
GRAPHIC NOVELS (coined
by Wil Eisner) are our beloved comic strips and comic
books. Those bubbles of text describing what the character is saying, is this
genre’s trademark. Fiction or nonfiction book can be made into a graphic novel
genre. EXAMPLES: Captain Underpants
by Dave Pilkey & Bone by Jeff Smith
·
HISTORICAL FICTION stories
revolve around a particular event, time period, circumstance. These stories are
“written to portray a time period or convey information about a specific time
period or an historical event.” A youth’s role is important in the development
of the story and takes time to develop in a chapter
book format. Characters may be fictional, or based on real-life characters.
In historical fiction, the setting is crucial in telling the story because of
its historical significance. EXAMPLES: Bud, Not Buddy, Stones in Water, Number
the Stars, Esperanza Rising, Al Capone Does my Shirts.
·
INFORMATIONAL or NON-FICTION “are designed to help readers learn more about real
things. They provide young readers information without the literary
devises common to fiction.”
·
JAPANESE MANGA
·
MANGA (“humorous pictures”) is the Japanese comic book genre which
is very popular among young and old in
·
PICTURE are 32 pages in format, capturing illustrations that fuse with the
words creating a seamless symbiotic storytelling design that enthrall the
imagination and cognitive delvelopment of children.
Concept Books, Alphabet Books, Number Books, Storyboard Books are Picture
Books.
·
POETRY involves
verse, rhythm, rhyme, writing styles, literary devices, symbolism, analogies,
and metaphors natural to our storytelling sensibilities. Jack Prelutsky and Shel Silverstein
are two of the most famous poets writing for children.
·
REALISTIC FICTION “features
main characters of approximately the age (or slightly older than) the book's
intended audience. The books present a real-world problem or challenge and show how a young person solves
that problem. By nature, children's realistic fiction is positive and upbeat, show young readers how they too can
conquer their problems. When written for young readers (up to 12 years
old.” Realistic fiction focuses on characters dealing with contemporary issues
of which the reader will be able to relate. EXAMPLES: Authors such as Jerry Spinelli, Beverly Cleary, Gary Paulsen, Matt Christopher, Cynthia Leitich-Smith write in
this genre.
·
SCIENCE FICTION genre involves stories that are told in settings beyond
the Earth’s orbit and involve futuristic technology beyond our present
limitations. Genre Rodenburry (Star Trek) and Ray
Bradbury wrote in this genre.
Sources:
Children’s Genre at http://www.breitlinks.com/my_libmedia/children's_genres.htm
Manga
101 at http://comicbooks.about.com/od/manga/ss/manga101.htm