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#love lessons jaqueline wilson
that-girl-glader · 7 months
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Melanie Martinez's Music = Jacqueline Wilson's books
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spaceminxx · 4 years
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If jaqueline wilson is gay what the fuck was love lessons about then?
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lilaac-skyy · 6 years
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"Let's play a game, shall we? Who was wearing a pretty red...hair ribbon yesterday and isn't wearing one today? Hmmm? Can you answer me that?Who does this disgusting ribbon belong to? I shall personally see to it that the demented, drooling, slime-breathed little Lilliputian who owns this DIS-GUSTING ribbon will never see the light of day again."- Trunchbull (You're welcome)
Ribbon: What's a book that had a strong impact on you?
((OOC: omg this reference tho! the amount of thought you put into this is. you just gotta go all out dontcha?? you just gotta play with the toy until breaks XD u beautiful beasty. I would say that the book Fangirl by Rainbow Rowell had an extremely strong impact on me especially having read it when I did and how much the themes resonated with my own life. But the book that probably affected me the most was Love Lessons by Jaqueline Wilson which I read when I was 10 and actually made me love reading to begin with. Before that book I hated reading and that story changed my life I’m not entirely sure why it just did, I am definitely a different person than I might’ve been without it.))
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I always loved writing stories. I can remember from even primary school age I thrived on creating characters and worlds vastly different to my own. I found joy when reading my story aloud to the class and hearing my peers muffled sounds of shock and excitement as my tale went on. One specific occasion I remember in high school, a particularly popular, mean girl eske bully approached me after an English lesson and commended me on my story which I had read out in class. I hope to get back into writing fiction. Growing up I used to read a lot more than I do now. Naturally as any millennial British female tween with an interest in reading does, I had began reading Jaqueline Wilson yet this soon expanded to my mothers collection of Dean Koontz, Kathy Reichs and other crime and horror based tales. Perhaps this is why I found suspense and horror writing so enjoyable. It was only later in my school life I moved on to the likes of Cecilia Ahern and more traditional classics such as Orwell, Bronte and Atwood.
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