Every hero needs a hurdle. Leo named his scout "Barnaby." Barnaby didn't just want a nap; he wanted to recover the Golden Yarn of Destiny, which had been snatched by the Great Winged Shadow (his neighbor’s very grumpy parrot).
Following the advice from his favorite guide, How to Write a Story , Leo decided to look for a "spark". He looked out the window. A stray cat was balancing on a fence. What if that cat wasn't just a cat? he wondered. What if it was a scout for a kingdom of backyard tigers? 156566 zip
Leo scrawled "The End" with a flourish. The desert of the page was gone, replaced by a world that hadn't existed ten minutes ago. He realized that a story isn't just words; it’s a place you build for someone else to visit. Write a Story Make it Yours: Burton, E.E. - Amazon.com Every hero needs a hurdle
While is not a standard U.S. ZIP code (which are five digits), the number corresponds to the International Standard Book Number (ISBN) for the popular children’s book How to Write a Story by Kate Messner and Mark Siegel. He looked out the window
Barnaby scaled the "Mountain of Thorns" (the rosebushes) and crossed the "Sea of Glass" (the patio table). The tension rose as the Winged Shadow let out a piercing squawk. Leo’s pencil flew across the page, capturing the rustle of feathers and the twitch of whiskers.
Taking inspiration from that book’s step-by-step approach, here is a short story about the process of creation itself: The Architect of Paper Worlds