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Like fireandice a minute ago, I too am an aspiring teen author. I have SO many ideas, but these are my main 4.Tell me which one you would rather read about.

Vanity Crash-An artistic introverted girl in the 1940s, born into a family of mystery and wealth, must solve her mother's murder.

Welcome to the Jungle-The glamorous daughter of NYC's most prominent model agent is caught in a difficult position when one of her mother's models die of anorexia. She must decide whether to stand behind her mother or do what she believes in righta and protest against it.

Camaraderie-Five emotional, mysterious teenagers attending a prestigious boarding school in England build an extremely loose and superficial friendship, only for the “wall” they have built over their sentiments to be intruded by a catastrophic event in the middle of the year.

A Dangerous Mind-A poor, delicate farm girl in 1920s Tuscany, Italy is tormented by her unrequited love of the captivating son of a vineyard owner.

2007-09-17 15:53:05 · 35 answers · asked by Anonymous in Arts & Humanities Books & Authors

35 answers

I like Vanity crash cause it's about murder and it seems compelling.

2007-09-17 15:57:28 · answer #1 · answered by The Agent 2 · 0 0

Camaraderie-Five emotional, mysterious teenagers attending a prestigious boarding school in England build an extremely loose and superficial friendship, only for the “wall” they have built over their sentiments to be intruded by a catastrophic event in the middle of the year.


or


A Dangerous Mind-A poor, delicate farm girl in 1920s Tuscany, Italy is tormented by her unrequited love of the captivating son of a vineyard owner.

2007-09-17 16:03:39 · answer #2 · answered by Cydney - 3 · 0 0

They are all good ideas in my opinion, but my 2 favourite picks are Vanity Crash & Camaraderie. Vanity Crash is a mystery, which is almost always interesting. I always wish it wasn't the mother who died, but its your choice. I like the idea of 1940's but also experiment with other time periods if you're so disposed. It is nice to see the differences in society 60 yrs. ago & today, but again your choice. Sounds great no matter what!

Camaraderie sounds intriguing because of more than 1 main character, & I'm already itching to know what the catasrophic event is.

Either one is good; do what you would rather spend time on. Good Luck!

2007-09-17 16:10:49 · answer #3 · answered by Rizwan 3 · 0 0

I can tell from this and from your other posts that you have a great imagination, and the passion to stick with writing. Sometimes though, when your imagination is constantly jumping to new ideas, it's hard to focus it on one thing. (I bet a lot of the "writer's block" people on here wish they had so many ideas, though).
Still, your inability to pick an idea, especially as a teenage writer, is not a problem. It's wonderful, because right now-- while you're young and hopefully have a parent or two to support you-- you have the freedom to experiment.
I say, go where your passion goes. If you start all the stories, one will probably win out.

Have fun!

2007-09-17 18:06:32 · answer #4 · answered by Roald Ellsworth 5 · 0 0

A Dangerous Mind

2007-09-17 16:02:35 · answer #5 · answered by llselva4 6 · 0 0

Somewhere in the back of my mind I have the same aspiration. I read a lot of mysteries but I am attracted to the author because of the way they write-not so much what the story line is. I love Dean Koontz. I don't like his dark so much but he is so descriptive. I like that he doesn't describe something, you feel it. When he opens Mr. Murder, the person walks into the room. You can smell the dust, you can see it in the sunlight coming thru the window. You just feel the room and it's so set up for the heartbeat to start. Read a few of his later books just for the feel of them. And then I don't like historic, romantic novels but I love the Outlander series-Diana Gabaldon. She makes you part of the family and you just fall in love with Jamie and become intrigued with the entire cast of characters. And while reading the large series, you learn a lot of what it would be like to live in the 1700's in many different places. And since she was smart enought to have her femme fall thru the stones in Scotland, you have a fairly modern woman looking at the times so that you can relate to all the carryings on. And my most favorite, Tom Robbins. He has the ability to weave a story about ridiculous people doing ridiculous things while telling you something entirely different while he often digresses into an entirely different story. He thoroughly amuses me and that's very hard to do. I've started reading every one of his books but don't want to say I've read them all so I start and then put it down and then start over and read a little further. He knows a lot of things for certain and one thing is people and most specifically women. God must love red-headed men for I surely do. . .

2007-09-17 16:20:15 · answer #6 · answered by towanda 7 · 0 1

I really liked Vanity Crash and A Dangerous Mind

2007-09-17 16:06:38 · answer #7 · answered by ripping_thunder 2 · 0 0

One of the things you learn as you write is that different stories take different levels of skill. Something written in a different time period is a higher skill level than writing for today. The more deep characters you have, again, the harder it is. You may be ready to only write one of these now. You can put the others away for another time, when they will be "easier" to write. I have had to do this with many of my stories.

Good luck, and have fun!
Write ALL of your ideas down. Someday when you are out of ideas, you can flip through your stash to break through writer's block. Keep the ones you don''t write about, because maybe you will write them someday.

All of them sound interesting. The last one has the possibilities of being interesting, but it would have to break the traditional mold somehow.

2007-09-17 16:01:26 · answer #8 · answered by Angeliss 5 · 5 0

Vanity Crash or A Dangerous Mind, though I don't like the title of the latter. They all sound great. You are very creative!

2007-09-17 17:13:59 · answer #9 · answered by Miss Angora 4 · 0 0

Actually, all your ideas seem good. I believe I'd be interested in reading each. Because I like mysteries a lot, I'd probably gravitate towards Vanity Crash first.

2007-09-17 16:00:03 · answer #10 · answered by ck1 7 · 0 0

Camaraderie

2007-09-17 16:02:42 · answer #11 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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