Let’s face it. Life is hard. There’s all sorts of things to
get us down. Bills. Medical issues. Work. You name it and somewhere in there
you’ll find a trial. We could cry. Get
frustrated. Scream and shout. But those things tend to give me a headache, which
is why I prefer to laugh.
There’s a reason they say laughter is the best medicine. It
reduces stress hormones, lowers blood pressure and increases memory and
learning.
So what better way to help ourselves and those around us,
then to write funny books?
I believe humor is a natural talent. We’re either born funny or we’re not. But, I also believe that with some guidance
and practice, most writers are capable of including a laugh into their carefully-crafted
tales. Forced humor never, ever works,
so try to relax and let the humor flow naturally.
Here are five basic tricks that could help you become a
better writer of humor for children:
·
Wordplay
– This technique can be used in so many different ways I could write
several blog posts about it.
One of my favorite uses of wordplay is
creating new words from common ones. In
my upcoming book, Little Dead Riding Hood, the MC is a vampire. Instead of saying something is fantastic, she
says it’s fangtastic. Instead of
using an iPod, she listens to music on a diepod.
Wordplay can also use techniques such as
rhetoric, hyperbole, and double entendre to name a few. Another more common use of wordplay is the
use of puns.
o
Puns
- These are one of the greatest sources
of humor and can be broken down into multiple sub-categories:
§
Homophones: Words that sound alike but
with different spellings and meanings. My favorite example of this is in Cloudy with a Chance of Meatballs 2,
when Flint exclaims, “There’s a leek in the boat!” The movie-goer is
then shown a screaming animated vegetable. While having a leak in the boat
would be cause for concern, the alternative creates quite a reaction from the
audience.
§
Homographic: Words that have the same
spelling but differ in meaning. Vampires
would be great at baseball but they just haven’t found the perfect bat. A baseball bat? Or a winged
creature? You decide.
§
Compound pun: Using two or more of any
pun(s) in a sentence. A good use is Douglas Adam’s famous example. "You can tune a guitar, but you can't tuna fish. Unless of course, you play bass."
o
Spoonerisms
– An accidental transposition of the beginning parts of words. My dad
uses spoonerisms all the time. Whenever I overslept and he had to wake me, he
called me Beeping Sleauty
(instead of Sleeping Beauty).
·
Figurative
Language/Idioms – A classic example of humor using this technique is
the Amelia Bedelia series. Who doesn’t remember Amelia Bedelia’s crazy antics
because she misinterpreted the instructions? From “dressing a turkey” in a
tuxedo or “dusting the furniture” with actual dust to “drawing the drapes” on a
sketchpad, as a child I was “in stitches”…uh-oh! Better hope Amelia’s not
around!
·
Irony
– I tend to keep my irony at a minimum when writing for children, though it
makes for great humor when the reader (as well as the MC) encounters a
situation which is the direct opposite of what they expected. Imagine your
female character who has developed a huge zit in the middle of her forehead. In
an attempt to save her already-at-stake popularity status and avoid being seen
by the boy she likes, she takes an alternate route to the always-avoided-never-before-used-bathroom
in the far recesses of the school to cover up the abomination with
make-up. On her way there, she bumps
into three boys from the football team, the head cheerleader, and her major
crush-o-rama…all of which undoubtedly see her zit. Oh the irony! If she’d only taken her normal
route to the regular bathroom, she would have avoided the embarrassment!
·
Pain
and Humiliation– Sorry to say, but yes, inflicting pain on your MC or
another character will cause your reader to laugh-out-loud. I’m not talking
about torture devices, or having them suffer within an inch of their life, but
rather a small slip. I think of Jennifer
Lawrence’s iconic trip up the Oscar stairs. Who didn’t laugh at that? Better
yet was when she laughed at herself.
·
Base
it on truth – There is humor in the everyday truth of life. That family vacation where everyone got
sunburned, the car broke down and the dog ran off. You laughed during that trip
(probably with an empty wallet and Aloe Vera gel smeared on your face, but you
still laughed). The day your son turned four and he sneezed on his birthday
cake. After scraping off the frosting and realizing the remaining mess once
identified as cake was unsalvageable, you laughed the whole way to the store to
buy a new one. Or how about the time your daughter used maxi-pads as band-aids?
She came downstairs covered from head-to-toe with those large, white, absorbent
strips. Right in the middle of your
dinner party. With your boss. After your flushed cheeks resumed their natural
color and the party ended, you undoubtedly had a good laugh.
That’s what makes humor so great. Keeping
it real.
The best tip to writing humor—be yourself! If you’re faking
it, everyone’s gonna know. You are. And more important, your reader is. So don’t try to fool them with a phony,
half-hearted attempt. Just write the truth and time it perfectly. Your reader
will thank you for it.
For more great posts about writing humor for kids, check out
these links:
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Amie Borst and her daughter Bethany are a mother daughter team, writing humorous middle grade fairy tales with a twist, such as "Cinderskella" and the upcoming "Little Dead Riding Hood." When not writing middle grade books with her daughter, Amie is busy crafting her own words in YA stories.
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Amie Borst has generously offered a copy of her book "Cinderskella" for one lucky ChaBooCha member. Just enter through the Rafflecopter link below. (Residents of the US or Canada, if a winner, may choose either Kindle or paperback formats. All residents of other countries may only enter to win the Kindle format.)
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