'West river accolade' by Paul Mickhendrich.
The title of the story is "The River" by Gary Paulsen. It follows a father and son who embark on a canoeing journey down a dangerous river in Canada.
Titles come from what you have written, not from some anonymous person on the internet! Finish your story, and the title will come to you out of what you've done. It has to tell the reader about the story, and you can't do that until the story is complete.
The title "Magic and the Night River" suggests a combination of enchantment ('Magic') and mystery ('Night River'). It may allude to themes of wonder and darkness, hinting at a story that involves mystical elements intertwined with the unknown and perhaps danger.
Try a beaver and a canoe, maybe a beaver paddling a canoe. If you wanted it to be more accurate you could have a stack of beaver skins in York Boat with several Scots rowing. Or a couple of trees on the bank of a river will do.
To pick a title for a book or story, the title should capture the theme of the story. To know what the title should be we would need to read the article or story that is in question to determine the story.
no.
A story is underlined or in italics. A short story is in quotes.
The title must come from your story! Write the story first, then your title will have come to you from what you wrote.
First, the correct title is "Dreams From my Father," and it was written by Barack Obama and published in 1995. It's about how he tried to understand his biological father (who abandoned him when he was little) and how he learned about his family history.
She inherited the title from her father.
The Likes of Me
Father Goose
The title comes from the story, not the other way around! Finish your story and you'll find the title from what you've written.