![]() Many people are surprised to learn that I love writing nonfiction. A frequent comment is, “But you aren’t a serious person!” Yes, writing nonfiction is serious business… but it can also be funny! Here are five tips (and mentor texts) to keep in mind if you want to add a touch of humor to your nonfiction. Choose a fun narrator. Instead of just presenting information in the typical manner, let your subject take over and share their own story! One Proud Penny – Randy Siegel PENNY proudly explains how it’s made and offers lots of fun details about money – in his own voice. Gross is good. Dig deep for the most fascinating, gross, unusual, weird and amazing facts. Your readers will thank you for it! Ick! Yuck! Eew! Our Gross American History – Lois Miner Huey This book contains lots of fun historical facts and doesn’t shy away from the gross stuff! Add a fun sidebar. Even if your subject is fairly serious, if you do find a fun fact or light-hearted example, put it in a side bar. This can be a breath of fresh air or some comic relief. Hot Diggity Dog: The History of the Hot Dog – Adrienne Sylver Its sidebars are full of extra facts and anecdotes relating to the humble hot dog. Really stretch and think outside the box to come up with tidbits that will surprise and delight readers. New angle or twist. Look for a unique way to present your information. Turn your topic upside down and inside out and shake it all about! Love geography? Want to introduce readers to the Arctic? Instead of presenting facts and figures, make the reader feel as if they are there. You Wouldn’t Want to Be…A Polar Explorer – Jen Green This series focuses on the nasty and negative aspects of jobs, lifestyles, and places throughout history. Written in second person, it helps the reader get up close and personal with the subject. Language, puns, inside jokes. Use words and phrases that match your topic. And remember that kids LOVE puns and fun word-play! I Fly: The Buzz About Flies and How Awesome They Are – Bridget Heos Get it? BUZZ? Cracks me up every time! No matter how serious you are, or how serious your subject is, a touch of humor can coax a smile, and maybe a giggle out of your reader. Go forth and be funny!
5 Comments
11/11/2020 03:44:15 am
Great ideas, Linda. I'd add Heather Montgomery's Something Rotten: A Fresh Look at Roadkill and Who Gives a Poop: Surprising Science From One End to the Other for topic and word choice. She really pushes the language and it works.
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Kathy Halsey
11/11/2020 04:39:13 am
Linda, I know you and I know you are funny and know "funny." Great concrete examples and books. I have a few to add to my TBR list. Thanks so much! *snort laugh*
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Charlotte Dixon
11/11/2020 10:34:04 am
LOL-You had me eewing and yucking by just reading the titles :) Thank you Linda for sharing the funny side of nonfiction. I appreciate the icky titles!
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Jilanne Hoffmann
11/11/2020 04:21:46 pm
Yes, gross is good. I'm thinking of a book that's coming out next year called, I EAT POOP. Of course, it's about a dung beetle. But that title sure catches the eye! And tips the gross out meter past 10!
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Disclaimer: The Nonfiction Ninjas are a group of writers with diverse ideas . The views expressed in each post are those of the author and may differ from others in the group.
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