Being rejected is not fun, I would know. I have been rejected so many times in my life that it hardly affects me, but being rejected is upsetting. You feel like you've done something that makes people not like you, like picked your nose or acted like a jerk, and now they feel like not hanging around you. Other times you're rejected because people don not se you as "cool" enough to be their friends or to hang around them. Say that I, a "not so cool dude", walks up to a table of other kids and I sit down with them. Now all of the other children have gotten up and walked over to the other empty table. Now I feel really left out and like nobody wants me around.
Rejecting people makes the rejected one feel really upset, or really mad. Would you want to be rejected? I do not think so.
Wednesday, April 30, 2014
Wednesday, April 23, 2014
Horror Story Elements
Of the three horror story elements, atmosphere, action and supernatural, I think that atmosphere is the most important and impacting element to any horror story.
In my opinion, I believe that atmosphere is the most important, and effective, element because it sets the mood for the rest of the story. You cannot simply have a story about a massive zombie monster with an inviting atmosphere, you need the reader to feel as if they are in the lab of a psychotic madman. The Mary Shelley does a phanomanal job on the atmosphere of her book, Frankenstein, or a Modern Day Prometheus. The way she introduces the setting and the current conflict for Frankenstein.
In my opinion, I believe that atmosphere is the most important, and effective, element because it sets the mood for the rest of the story. You cannot simply have a story about a massive zombie monster with an inviting atmosphere, you need the reader to feel as if they are in the lab of a psychotic madman. The Mary Shelley does a phanomanal job on the atmosphere of her book, Frankenstein, or a Modern Day Prometheus. The way she introduces the setting and the current conflict for Frankenstein.
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