Dear Reader,
Hello, hi. I'm the Writer and I have a story for you. This story is meant to be read all at once and one at a time. First comes the first section of the narrative. Then the expository text, then half the poem. After another brief section of narrative, we have the persuasive text. Then we go into the second to last stretch of narrative, then the full version of the poem, then we wrap up the narrative and we're done. One chapters 1-4, you see a character collage. We have Day, Night, Griffin and Nessie, in that order. Each of the artifacts are linked to the main story, the narrative portion. Think of a freeway, with on and off ramps and the main highway itself. The expository, persuasive, poem and collage are all the on and off ramps. The main highway is the narrative, they all merge together.
Why is this topic meaningful to me. That's a question. This topic is meaningful to me because the concept of heroism is fascinating. The concept that someone could become greater than they are, to evolve and improve and save someone. Because heroes save people, generally, out of the goodness of their own heart and not to receive a reward.
What I've learned through this process is both what people believe a hero should be, and what a hero really is. I've learned what it feels like to lose a mentor, and how to write an incredible battle scene.
Well, reader, this is the end. This is where I must let you explore on your own, find things by yourself. Good luck, dear reader.Cheers,
The Writer
YOU ARE READING
Of Fire and Waves
ActionThe woman, wreathed in flames. The woman, shrouded in shadows. The woman, dancing with waves. Day saw fire, Night saw darkness, Nessie saw the sea.