• Books,  Novel Study,  Reading Workshop,  The Girl Who Drank the Moon

    How to Teach Foreshadowing Using “The Girl Who Drank the Moon”

    By the end of The Girl Who Drank the Moon all the loose ends have been neatly tied up. This makes it an excellent jumping off point for a discussion about foreshadowing. Foreshadowing is best understood after the fact. So an easy way to discuss foreshadowing in The Girl Who Drank the Moon is to ask students how one of the big reveals at the end of the book was suggested by details throughout the beginning and middle of the book. Here’s an example… Using Big Reveals to Discuss Foreshadowing Big Reveal: At the end of the book we learn that the Protectorate was imprisoned by Ignatia’s greed for sorrow.…

  • Novel Study,  Reading Workshop,  The Girl Who Drank the Moon

    7 Important Literary Devices in “The Girl Who Drank the Moon”

    Some books present you with the best kind of difficulty: they are full to bursting with literary goodies, so rich that you can’t hope to teach the book for absolutely all it’s worth. Far from scouring the page to figure out something that will excite students and meet your instructional goals, these books require you to practice restraint–to pick out a few gems and leave the rest alone, so as not to belabor the reading. The Girl Who Drank the Moon by Kelly Barnhill is one of those books. I recently digitized my Girl Who Drank the Moon novel study, and was reminded of how well the author used multiple…

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