Celebrate your child's love of learning
© Wondertime
How to Tell a Scary Story
Written By Pete Nelsen
Start in the middle, with somebody in trouble.
Speak slowly, with furtive glances and long pauses.
If stuck, ask questions like, "And do you know what happened next?" Your child may give you something you can use.
For physical details, use things your child already knows, like the "Snoktopus," half snake, half octopus.
Give the creature a fatal flaw (and yourself a narrative exit strategy), like the Snoktopus that loved music and could be hypnotized by it.
Work in a kid-protagonist your child can identify with, like The Little Shepherd Boy Who Played the Flute and Tamed a Wild Snoktopus.
Don't bring in adults to save the protagonist. It's better to give kids power to save
themselves.
Endings are key. Monsters can be imprisoned, petrified, or converted to good by the kindness of a child who isn't afraid.
Plus:
Why Kids Like Scary Stories
One Son's Love of Scary Stories