Muxel
Dagobah Resident
Come to think of it, the ones I read might've been that way too.Scarlet said:In some books every other page was just text, but those ones all had illustrations on the pages next to the text.
But a firefly time-transition page could be text-free, for instance.That was a nice story! I thought of Chauvet and Lascaux cave art. Animals were bigger, "wilder" then. The Irish Elk (giant deer with giant antlers) still roamed. So did cave lions. A little touch of an Ice Age. I've seen pics of mammoth hunting and mammoth huts, but they look rather encyclopedic. Perhaps: ancient runes, Reiki symbols, white stone circles,... and a color palette that makes the whole thing look <magical/real>?Patience said:Question on the village – What should their lodgings look like?
Maybe the grandmother points out a modern bloated man in his office suit, with his burger+donut+coffee+soda, and how he is incapable of hunting.Patience said:What is the context here so that we can present an appropriate lesson? This is a children's book for kids who have parents on a paleo-diet. It is not a kid's job to decide her own diet, so we are not teaching our heroine how to eat a paleo-diet exactly though that is part of it. We are teaching her why to avoid the numerous temptations to eat junk food when not eating at home.
Good luck finding paid assignments, NewOrleans!
when she hear this first and then she starts laughing out loud
and says that this is the most ridiculus thing that she ever heard and so on. Polly doesn't understand her response but when they get back home Poola explains her why they don't drink milk.

